Outsourcing an private Akteure

Outsourcing bedeutet, (operative) Aufgaben oder Prozesse an Dritte zu übergeben bzw. auszulagern. Entsprechende Studien beziehen sich auf alle Outsourcing-Prozesse im Zusammenhang mit der Anwendung und Umsetzung staatlicher Richtlinien, Gesetze, Vorschriften oder Maßnahmen, die an nichtstaatliche Akteure vergeben werden (sowohl des profitorientierten privaten Sektors als auch des dritten Sektors ohne Gewinnabsichten). Im Bereich der Migration erfolgt Outsourcing beispielsweise zur Grenzüberwachung an private Akteure (Unternehmen), zur Verwaltung und Bereitstellung von Aufnahmeeinrichtungen (Zivilgesellschaft, Nichtregierungsorganisationen oder privater Sektor) oder zur Verwaltung von Lagereinrichtungen bzw. Haftanstalten für MigrantInnen.

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A new era for labour migration in the GCC?

Authors Philip Martin, Froilan T. Malit
Year 2017
Journal Name MIGRATION LETTERS
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
12 Journal Article

Regulating Immigration Control: Carrier Sanctions in the Netherlands

Authors Sophie Scholten, Paul Minderhoud
Year 2008
Journal Name European Journal of Migration and Law
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
14 Journal Article

An Analysis of Factors Influencing the International Migration of Indian Nurses

Authors Hisaya Oda, Yuko Tsujita, Sebastian Irudaya Rajan
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
15 Journal Article

Outsourcing Care

Authors Jessaca B. Leinaweaver
Year 2010
Journal Name Latin American Perspectives
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35 Journal Article

Demography, migration, and the labour market in Bahrain

Authors Françoise DE BEL-AIR
Description
Mid-2013, estimates of Bahrain s population stood at 1,253,191 persons, of whom 638,361 (51 per cent) were foreign nationals. Most were from Asia (85 per cent) and especially from India (half of all foreign residents). Eighty per cent of expatriates are employed. They account for 77 per cent of the employed population and 81 per cent of the private sector s workforce. Asians are overwhelmingly involved in services and blue collar occupations, while Arabs more often fill managerial posts. Immigration flows to the Kingdom increased significantly over the 2000s, fuelled by high oil prices and the ensuing boom in the construction and services sectors. This demonstrates the difficulty to reconcile labour reforms, and especially, the Bahrainisation of the work force, with the maximisation of economic productivity.
Year 2015
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
41 Report

The EU’s External Labour Mobility and Trade—a Multilayered Governance Approach?

Authors Flavia Jurje
Year 2018
Book Title EU external migration policies in an era of global mobilities : intersecting policy universes
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
46 Book Chapter

How does a settler state secure the circuitry of capital?

Authors Shiri Pasternak, Tia Dafnos
Year 2017
Journal Name Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
Citations (WoS) 14
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47 Journal Article

Demography, migration and labour market in Saudi Arabia

Authors Françoise DE BEL-AIR
Description
Saudi Arabia is a prime destination and source of remittances from workers for many countries in Asia and the Arab world. As of mid-2013, expatriates made up 32 percent of the Kingdom's population, most of them coming from South Asia. They accounted for 56.5 percent of the employed population and 89 percent of the private sector workforce. Since September 2011, and in spite of a spurt in foreign labour recruitment starting in the mid-2000s, a voluntary policy called Nitaqat aims at 'Saudising' the Kingdom's workforce. The most recent data also show the scale of the irregular migration phenomenon in Saudi Arabia: the amnesty campaign which started in April 2013 allowed 4.7 million foreign workers to regularise their status, while an ongoing crackdown on illegals forced one million to leave the Kingdom in 2013 alone, of which (as of November 30, 2013) 547,000 were deported.
Year 2014
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
49 Report

Impact of tourist trips on seniors' migrations - case study from Poland

Authors Adam R. Szromek, Slawomir Pytel, Julita Markiewicz-Patkowska, ...
Year 2021
Journal Name JOURNAL OF TOURISM AND CULTURAL CHANGE
Citations (WoS) 2
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
51 Journal Article

Demography, migration, and the labour market in Oman

Authors Françoise DE BEL-AIR
Description
As of May 27, 2015, estimates of Oman’s total population stood at 4,187,516 persons, of whom 1,849,412 (44.2 per cent) were foreign nationals. Foreign workers are overwhelmingly from the Asian subcontinent: Indians, Bangladeshis and Pakistanis together made up 87 per cent of the workforce in 2013. Eighty-two per cent of all foreign workers were employed in the private sector that year, and 12 per cent were filling managerial and “white collar” posts. The flow of foreign workers to Oman has been rising over the 2000s up till today. Lagging youth employment and rising poverty levels spurred popular protests in 2011 which slowed down economic diversification and the private sector’s development process. However, sectoral Omanisation quotas are now enforced and the hiring of Omani nationals in every business has become mandatory. Aggressive measures also target foreign residents in irregular situation which has led to several massive amnesty and deportation campaigns since 2010.
Year 2015
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
52 Report

Civil Society, the Common Space, and the GFMD

Authors Chukwu-Emeka Chikezie
Book Title Global Perspectives on Migration and Development
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54 Book Chapter

Apathy and Color-Blindness in Privatized Immigration Control

Authors Kim Ebert, Wenjie Liao, Emily P. Estrada
Year 2019
Journal Name Sociology of Race and Ethnicity
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
60 Journal Article

Privatization and the Social Value of Water in Africa

Authors Akinpelu Olutayo, Ayokunle Omobowale, Jimoh Amzat
Year 2009
Journal Name Human Affairs
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64 Journal Article

The migration industries. A new perspective in the analysis of international migration?

Authors Ana Lopez-Sala
Year 2020
Journal Name EMPIRIA
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71 Journal Article

Migration Governance and Asylum Crises

Principal investigator Lennart Olsson (), Mine Islar (), Anne Jerneck ()
Description Read More
Year 2019
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
75 Project

Job Satisfaction in Public and Private Schools: Competition is Key

Authors Peter Dahler‐Larsen, Søren Kjær Foged
Year 2017
Journal Name Social Policy & Administration
Citations (WoS) 1
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
77 Journal Article

Libyan Legislation on Labour: Political Tool or Legalization?

Authors Azza K. MAGHUR
Description Read More
Year 2009
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
80 Report

Grip houden op publieke belangen. Onderzoek naar privatisering in het migratiebeleid

Authors The Dutch Advisory Committee on Migration Affairs (Adviescommissie voor Vreemdelingenzaken, ACVZ)
Description Read More
Year 2021
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
90 Report

Demography, migration, and the labour market in the UAE

Authors Françoise DE BEL-AIR
Description Read More
Year 2015
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
91 Report

China's Continuing Urban Transition

Authors Clifton W Pannell
Year 2002
Journal Name Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space
Taxonomy View Taxonomy Associations
99 Journal Article
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