Employeurs/Employeuses, travail et syndicats

The results displayed under this category refer to employers, employer’s associations or groups, trade or labour unions and their role or involvement with migration issues.

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Hyper-mobile migrant workers and Dutch trade union representation strategies at the Eemshaven construction sites

Authors Lisa Berntsen, Nathan Lillie
Year 2016
Journal Name Economic and Industrial Democracy
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1 Journal Article

“The Most Open System Among OECD Countries”: Swedish regulation of labour migration

Authors Catharina Calleman
Year 2015
Journal Name Nordic Journal of Migration Research
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2 Journal Article

‘A STRONG MIND AND A SOLID PHYSIQUE’: Symbolic Constructions of Migrant Workers in Sweden’s Green Industries

Authors Irma Olofsson, Irma Olofsson, Aina Tollefsen, ...
Year 2023
Journal Name Nordic Journal of Migration Research
Citations (WoS) 3
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3 Journal Article

Labour Migration in Europe

Authors Alexander Caviedes, Georg Menz
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4 Book

Understanding Adverse Outcomes in Gulf Migration: Evidence from Administrative Data from Sri Lanka

Authors Asanga Nilesh Fernando, Alison Lodermeier
Year 2021
Journal Name International Migration Review
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6 Journal Article

Economic change and health benefits: Structural trends in employer-based health insurance

Authors LA Cubbins, P Parmer
Year 2001
Journal Name JOURNAL OF HEALTH AND SOCIAL BEHAVIOR
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7 Journal Article

ENFORCING THE MINIMUM-WAGE AND EMPLOYER SANCTIONS

Authors DS NORTH
Year 1994
Journal Name The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
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8 Journal Article

Syrian refugees in Turkey and trade union responses

Authors Seyhan Erdogdu
Year 2018
Journal Name Globalizations
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9 Journal Article

HEALTH-CARE REFORM - A LABOR PERSPECTIVE

Authors JP NIXON, KM IGNAGNI
Year 1993
Journal Name American Behavioral Scientist
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10 Journal Article

Network effects on labor contracts of internal migrants in China: a spatial autoregressive model

Authors Badi H. Baltagi, Ying Deng, Xiangjun Ma
Year 2018
Journal Name Empirical Economics
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11 Journal Article

Opportunity or Opportunism? An Examination of International Recruitment via Employer and Nation Branding Strategies

Authors Thomas G. Pittz, Philip G. Benson, Melissa L. Intindola, ...
Year 2017
Journal Name BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL ETHICS JOURNAL
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13 Journal Article

International trade-unionism and migration: European integration and the post-war 'Free' movement of labour

Authors Johan Svanberg
Year 2021
Journal Name LABOR HISTORY
Citations (WoS) 1
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14 Journal Article

The Privatization of Control over Labour Migration in the Netherlands: In Whose Interest?

Authors Tesseltje de Lange
Year 2011
Journal Name European Journal of Migration and Law
Citations (WoS) 6
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15 Journal Article

Trade union research: for what purpose?

Authors Julia Hofmann
Year 2017
Journal Name Österreichische Zeitschrift für Soziologie
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16 Journal Article

Race and Job Dismissals in a Federal Bureaucracy

Authors C ZWERLING, H SILVER
Year 1992
Journal Name American Sociological Review
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17 Journal Article

Schools for Democracy

Authors Veronica Terriquez
Year 2011
Journal Name American Sociological Review
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18 Journal Article

Unionization, licensure and workplace variation in pay inequality between immigrants and natives

Authors Ida Drange, Håvard Helland, Are Skeie Hermansen
Year 2024
Journal Name Socio-Economic Review
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19 Journal Article

Labour Migration, Employer Preferences and Symbolic Boundary Work

Authors Thomas Saetre Jakobsen, Thomas Sætre Jakobsen, Inga Sæther, ...
Year 2023
Journal Name Nordic Journal of Migration Research
Citations (WoS) 1
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20 Journal Article

L’autonomie de l’individu européen et la question du statut

Authors Loic AZOULAI
Year 2013
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21 Working Paper

Evidence on Employer Attitudes and EQUAL Opportunities for the Disadvantaged in a Flexible and Open Economy

Authors Mike Danson, Karen Gilmore
Year 2009
Journal Name Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy
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22 Journal Article

Migrants and Ethnic Minorities in the Netherlands: Discrimination in Access to Employment

Authors Frank Bovenkerk, Mitzi Gras
Book Title Migrants, Ethnic Minorities and the Labour Market
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23 Book Chapter

Exploring employer attitude towards migrant workers

Authors Ali Dehghanpour Farashah, Tomas Blomquist
Year 2019
Journal Name Evidence-based HRM: a Global Forum for Empirical Scholarship
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24 Journal Article

Returning home empty handed: Examining how COVID-19 exacerbates the non-payment of temporary migrant workers’ wages

Authors Laura Foley, Nicola Piper
Year 2021
Journal Name Global Social Policy
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25 Journal Article

Von der sozialen Neuzusammensetzung zur gewerkschaftlichen Erneuerung? MigrantInnen als Zielgruppe der österreichischen Gewerkschaftsbewegung

Authors Markus Griesser, Birgit Sauer
Year 2017
Journal Name Österreichische Zeitschrift für Soziologie
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26 Journal Article

The governance of the Kafala system and the punitive control of migrant domestic workers

Authors Rhacel Salazar Parreñas, Rachel Silvey
Year 2021
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
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27 Journal Article

Migration and the Employer Perspective: Pitfalls and Potentials for a Future Research Agenda

Authors Sam Scott
Year 2013
Journal Name Population, Space and Place
Citations (WoS) 18
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28 Journal Article

Democracy in private government (a case study of the International Typographical Union)

Authors Seymour M. Lipset
Year 2010
Journal Name The British Journal of Sociology
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29 Journal Article

A sectorial approach to labour migration : agriculture and domestic work

Authors Anna TRIANDAFYLLIDOU
Description
Today more than ever, the European Union needs a comprehensive albeit differentiated approach towards legal labour migration, which responds to the varied needs of domestic labour markets and at the same time discourages effectively irregular migration. The segmented structure of domestic labour markets and the demographic deficit of Europe lead to increasing demand for a migrant labour force. This labour force is concentrated in specific sectors, such as cleaning, catering and care jobs for women; and construction, agricultural and semi-skilled manufacturing jobs for men. Such labour shortages are better catered to by a demand-led approach that takes into account the different economic cycles of Member States, their different economies and labour markets, while at the same time responds to long-term sociodemographic processes, including: a. The ageing of European societies; b. The configuration of nuclear families without extended support networks to cover needs for care of children or elderly/disabled people; c. The participation of women in paid work outside the home; d. These trends are irreversible and persist even in periods of economic downturn or weak growth. A flexible albeit proactive regulatory framework that would allow for demand and shortages to drive recruitment of migrant workers, while also being adaptable to territorial and sectorial variations, would be optimal. Of course, the thorny issue also needs to be addressed of how to match flexibility with worker protection from exploitation, setting up a clear and realistic set of rights and duties for both employer and employee. A framework sectorial approach can be tested in niche sectors such as domestic work or agriculture, complementing existing directives regulating training, research, students, intracompany transferees, highskill migrants and seasonal employment.
Year 2017
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30 Report

Desirable skills? Non-Nordic citizens applying for work permits in Sweden, 1947-1950

Authors Per-Olof Gronberg, Fay Lundh Nilsson, Glenn Sandstrom
Year 2015
Journal Name Labor History
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31 Journal Article

Erratum

Authors Veronica Terriquez
Year 2011
Journal Name American Sociological Review
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32 Journal Article

When what you have is not enough—Acquiring Australian qualifications to overcome non‐recognition of overseas skills

Authors George Tan, Andreas Cebulla
Year 2022
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 4
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33 Journal Article

The Unwanted Service Provider: Implementation of WTO and EU Liberalisation of Service Mobility in the Dutch Legal Order

Authors Simon Tans
Year 2011
Journal Name Refugee Survey Quarterly
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34 Journal Article

Free Movement for Some: The Treatment of the Roma after the European Union’s Eastern Expansion

Authors Jacqueline S. Gehring
Year 2013
Journal Name European Journal of Migration and Law
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35 Journal Article

Temporary Migration Programmes: the Cause or Antidote of Migrant Worker Exploitation in UK Agriculture

Authors Erica Consterdine, Sahizer Samuk
Year 2018
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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36 Journal Article

Can Small Businesses Help Reduce Employment Exclusion?

Authors John Kitching
Year 2006
Journal Name Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy
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37 Journal Article

The Employment Contract Revisited. Undocumented Migrant Workers and the Intersection between International Standards, Immigration Policy and Employment Law

Authors Andreas Inghammar
Year 2010
Journal Name European Journal of Migration and Law
Citations (WoS) 6
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38 Journal Article

Chipping Away at the Fortress: Unions, Immigration and the Transnational Labour Market

Authors Gamze Avci, Christopher McDonald
Year 2000
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 22
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39 Journal Article

Understanding employer branding within MNC subsidiaries: Evidence from MNC hotel subsidiaries in Indonesia

Authors Arnold Japutra, Arnold Japutra, Ringkar Situmorang, ...
Year 2024
Journal Name Journal of International Management
Citations (WoS) 2
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40 Journal Article

Reliance on migrant labour: inevitability or policy choice?

Authors Bridget Anderson, Martin Ruhs
Year 2012
Journal Name Journal of Poverty and Social Justice
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41 Journal Article

A study on undocumented migrant workers in the Dutch household sector

Authors P Nijkamp, P Rietveld
Year 2014
Journal Name International Journal of Manpower
Citations (WoS) 3
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42 Journal Article

Migration and Trade Union Responses. Analysis of the UK in a Comparative Perspective

Description
'This project aims to develop and test an analytical framework for the understanding of the changing relations between national trade unions and migrant workers in host European countries, looking at a national context particularly affected by recent intra-European immigration (UK) and expanding on a previous comparative study on Italy and the Netherlands carried out by the applicant in her doctoral research. The proposed research consists of a two-level analysis: a “between-sectors” level (metalworking, construction and care industries within the UK) and a “between-nations” level (comparison of the UK with the previously studied Italy and the Netherlands). The analysis addresses three main aspects: factors influencing union stances towards labour immigration and migrants; effects of union attitude on migration policies and migrant workers; processes of union interaction with migrant workers. The proposed methodology combines quantitative and qualitative methods. Being situated at the intersection between migration studies and employment relations, this study will contribute to the scholarly debate in the following fields: comparative employment relations (revitalization and varieties of capitalism approaches), migration studies (integration of migrants in host European countries in face of the current economic decline and increase of social hostility), sociology of labour and labour market studies (analysis of labour market dynamics in presence of increasing flexibilization and migration). The proposed mobility will allow the applicant to be trained by outstanding European scholars in industrial relations, to receive extensive support on migration by a sister multidisciplinary research institute and, especially, to acquire new methodological instruments and insights on gender studies. Such elements, together with the manifold opportunities offered by the host institution, will prepare the applicant for a position of academic independence.'
Year 2012
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43 Project

THE SELECTIVE CONTROL OF FRONTIERS AND ITS TRANSNATIONAL RESISTENCES

Authors Iker Barbero
Year 2010
Journal Name Arbor
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46 Journal Article

Trafficking in domestic work : looking at the demand-side

Authors Alexandra RICARD-GUAY
Year 2016
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47 Working Paper

Harry O’Connell, maritime labour and the racialised politics of place

Authors David Featherstone
Year 2016
Journal Name Race & Class
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48 Journal Article

Consumer and Employer Discrimination in Professional Sports Markets: New Evidence from Major League Baseball

Authors Wolfgang Maennig, Steffen Q. Mueller
Year 2022
Citations (WoS) 1
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49 Journal Article

Migrant worker policies and national privilege: A UK case study

Authors Pier-Luc Dupont
Year 2021
Journal Name Deusto Journal of Human Rights
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50 Journal Article

Help Wanted: Employer Demand for Less-Skilled Temporary Foreign Worker Visas in an Era of Declining Unauthorized Immigration

Authors Pia M. Orrenius, Madeline Zavodny
Year 2020
Citations (WoS) 7
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51 Journal Article

Swedish Employers and Trade Unions, Varieties of Capitalism and Labour Migration Policies

Authors Jesper Johansson
Year 2012
Journal Name Nordic Journal of Migration Research
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53 Journal Article

Patterns of Integration: <i>A Longitudinal View of the Labour Market Attachment of Immigrants in Finland</i>

Authors Oxana Krutova, Liudmila Lipanen, Pertti Koistinen
Year 2016
Journal Name Nordic Journal of Migration Research
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55 Journal Article

Employer Preferences Towards Recruitment of Refugees – A Danish Vignette Study

Authors Rasmus Lind Ravn, Thomas Bredgaard
Year 2021
Journal Name Nordic Journal of Migration Research
Citations (WoS) 3
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57 Journal Article

Readmission, return and reintegration in Georgia

Authors Natia CHELIDZE
Description
It is now two years since the enactment of the Agreement between the European Union and Georgia concerning the readmission of persons residing without authorization. In this context, it may be interesting to discover whether the expectations regarding the threat of mass deportation of irregular Georgian migrants which arose during the negotiation period have been justified. According to one segment of the society and political groups in Georgia1 , the en masse forcible return of migrants to a country with an estimated unemployment rate of 32%2 (as assessed by experts) would generate economic challenges for these people and their families; moreover, it would also place a heavy burden on the country as a whole. Nor is the assumption, which holds that the EU-Georgia Agreement would serve to further impair the poor conditions in which irregular labor migrants residing in the EU countries live and work, groundless. This can be explained by the fact that the attitude of a foreign employer towards such persons might become stricter, and that he/she could be expected to increase pressure upon them3 . The other part of the aforementioned society and political groups is well aware that the coming into effect of the agreement concerning visa facilitation procedures between the European Union and Georgia was dependent upon the signing and introduction of the readmission agreement. Both treaties can be regarded as a transition step to a new phase of the relationship between Georgia and the EU.
Year 2013
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58 Report

Non-removable Returnees under Union Law: Status Quo and Possible Developments

Authors Fabian Lutz
Year 2018
Journal Name European Journal of Migration and Law
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59 Journal Article

Advancing understanding of unionization in the hospitality industry: the role of attitudes toward unions and social justice

Authors Piotr Zientara, Joanna Adamska-Mieruszewska, Monika Bak
Year 2024
Citations (WoS) 1
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60 Journal Article

Employer Sanctions and the Wages of Mexican Immigrants

Authors Peter Brownell
Year 2017
Journal Name RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences
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61 Journal Article

Employers, agencies and immigration : paying for care

Authors Anna TRIANDAFYLLIDOU, Sabrina MARCHETTI
Year 2015
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62 Book

Spatial aspects of labour mobility in the 1980s

Authors D.W. Owen, A.E. Green
Year 1989
Journal Name Geoforum
Citations (WoS) 17
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63 Journal Article

Trade Unions and New Member State Workers in Germany and the UK

Authors Rebecca ZAHN
Year 2011
Journal Name International Journal of Comparative Labour Law and Industrial Relations, 2011, 27, 2, 139-164
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64 Journal Article

Engaging with New Zealand's Recognized Seasonal Employer Work Policy: The Case of Tuvalu

Authors Charlotte Bedford, Richard Bedford, Elsie Ho
Year 2010
Journal Name Asian and Pacific Migration Journal
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65 Journal Article

Immigration, labour markets and employment relations: Problems and prospects

Authors Patrick McGovern
Year 2007
Journal Name British Journal of Industrial Relations
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66 Journal Article

Labour, Migration and the Spatial Fix: Evidence from the UK Food Industry

Authors Sam Scott
Year 2013
Journal Name Antipode
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68 Journal Article

Immigrant Workers and Australian Trade Unions: Participation and Attitudes

Authors Santina Bertone, Gerard Griffin, Roderick D. Iverson
Year 1995
Journal Name International Migration Review
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69 Journal Article

Frictional Labour Mobility

Authors Benoît Schmutz, Modibo Sidibé
Year 2018
Journal Name Review of Economic Studies
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70 Journal Article

A Qualitative Study of Female Migrant Domestic Workers' Experiences of and Responses to Work-Based Sexual Violence in Cyprus

Authors Christiana Kouta, Christalla Pithara, Zoe Apostolidou, ...
Year 2021
Citations (WoS) 3
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71 Journal Article

EMPLOYER SANCTIONS AND THE LIMITS OF NEGOTIATION

Authors R PEROTTI
Year 1994
Journal Name The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
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73 Journal Article

Australian Employer Response to the Study‐Migration Pathway: The Quantitative Evidence 2007‐2011

Authors Lesleyanne Hawthorne, Anna To
Year 2014
Journal Name International Migration
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74 Journal Article

Seasonal Migration and how to Regulate it

Authors Anna Triandafyllidou
Description
In the latest issue of ELIAMEP Thesis Anna Triandafyllidou states that the European Commission has recently issued a proposal for a Directive regulating the conditions of entry and residence of third-country nationals for the purposes of seasonal employment (COM (2010) 379 final). This Directive proposal is part of the Commission’s strategy to regulate labour migration through a piecemeal approach; notably through regulating specific categories of migrant workers. This paper discusses what seasonal migration is and how it differs from circular, temporary, or shuttle migration. It argues that seasonal migration is a form of temporary migration that has a seasonal character and hence concerns employment sectors which are characterised by seasons of high and low employment, including thus not only agriculture but also tourism and catering but normally excluding construction or domestic work for instance.The essay in hand reviews critically the Directive Proposal and argues that although it may be seen as a step forward in transparency and in bringing closer Member State provisions in the area of seasonal migration, it needs a boost as regards the protection of seasonal migrants’ labour conditions and employment rights. In view of regulating seasonal labour migration at the EU level, the Directive should also consider whether seasonal labour migrants should be allowed to move also between Member States. On the other hand, the proposal is evaluated positively for a number of features such as: not tying the worker to her/his employer, allowing for the right to join trade unions, and proposing a simplified bureaucratic procedure for multiple entry visas.
Year 2010
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75 Report

Being “top‐ranked” without “causing troubles”: Comparing federal and provincial immigration pathways for Chinese international students in Canada

Authors Chen Wang-Dufil, Amrita Hari
Year 2022
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 2
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77 Journal Article

Trade unions challenges in organising Polish workers: A comparative case study of British and Swiss trade union strategies

Authors Adam Rogalewski
Year 2022
Journal Name European Journal of Industrial Relations
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78 Journal Article

Movement of IT professionals between India and the EU : issues and the way forward

Authors Divya SATIJA, Arpita MUKHERJEE
Description
India and the European Union (EU) are major exporters of information technology (IT) and Itenabled services (ITeS) and both have high domestic demand for such services.The paper found that movement of professionals has benefitted both Indian and EU companies and, in future, bilateral trade in the IT/ITeS sector and labour mobility is likely to increase. However, there are a number of barriers affecting movement of professionals in this sector. The paper suggests that while some of these can be addressed through domestic reforms in India and the EU, others can be addressed under the on-going India-EU Broadbased Trade and Investment Agreement (BTIA) and through inter-governmental cooperation between India and EU member states.
Year 2013
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79 Report

Worker Militancy in South Africa: A Sociospatial Analysis of Trade Union Activism in the Manufacturing Sector

Authors M Sutcliffe, P Wellings
Year 1985
Journal Name Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
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81 Journal Article

Delicate dances: immigrant workers' experiences of injury reporting and claim filing

Authors Agnieszka Kosny, Ellen MacEachen, Marni Lifshen, ...
Year 2012
Journal Name Ethnicity &amp; Health
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82 Journal Article

Challenging the trade union agenda: migrants' interest representation and German trade unions in Hamburg in the 1970s and 1980s

Authors Anne Lisa Carstensen
Year 2021
Journal Name LABOR HISTORY
Citations (WoS) 2
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83 Journal Article

Illegal employment of Third-Country Nationals in the EU – Luxembourg

Authors Adolfo Sommarribas, Ralph Petry, Birte Nienaber
Description
Illegal employment by third country nationals is a reality in Luxembourg. However, as well as in the case of grey and informal economy, it is rather hard to grasp or quantify to which extent. Nevertheless, the problem is not as significant as the one of the posted workers which is more relevant and worrisome and needs to be situated in the context of a labour market of the Greater Region. In the past, several labour related regularisation measures have been implemented in Luxembourg in order to provide both employers and employees the possibility to regularise situations of illegal employment. The last labour related regularisation measure was implemented in early 2013 in the context of the transposition of the Employers' Sanctions Directive 2009/52 by law of 21 December 2012. During this regularisation, the Directorate of Immigration received 664 applications. These regularisations give a partial indication of the extent of the phenomenon, even though these numbers do not provide a real picture of the problem because the conditions of this regularisation were very strict and in a very short time frame (less than two months) and a certain number of irregular migrants’ workers were not willing to expose themselves by applying and preferred to remain undetected. This regularisation also provided information on the main sectors were the phenomenon is found in order of importance: HORECA, cleaning, crafts, industry and construction. The Ministry of Labour, Employment and Social and Solidary Economy at the end of the regularisation has insisted in the need to increase the number of controls to employers. The law of 21 December 2012 established administrative as well as criminal sanctions for employers who illegally employ irregularly staying third country nationals, particularly in relation to offenses to the Labour Code in aggravating circumstances. This law amended also article 89 of the Immigration Law abrogating the possibility of making labour related regularisations. The Inspectorate of Labour (‘Inspection de Travail et des Mines’, hereafter called ITM), which is in charge of labour inspections and the control of illegal employment of TCNs in Luxembourg, is currently going through a restructuring phase following the latest audit of this administration from January 2015. Particularly the current insufficient number of staff of the ITM, which is in need of a significant short term increase of staff, represents a main challenge in the field of illegal employment in Luxembourg. It is also in the context of this restructuring phase of the responsible administration that the drafting of this study presented a number of challenges, especially in relation to the operational and statistical part of the template. The information regarding the conditions to be fulfilled by both the employers and the employees in the context of an employment relationship are available on the website of the concerned authorities. Furthermore, they are disseminated by the NGOs working in the field, even though there are no specific campaigns targeted to prevent illegal employment of TCNs. The matter was raised in the context of the ‘social identification badge’, which was introduced in 2013 in order to fight against social dumping in particular in the construction sector. One national stakeholder suggested that the ‘social identification badge’ could be revised and adapted to other economic sectors in order to better monitor and prevent illegal employment. In regards to access to justice and enforcement of rights of illegally employed TCNs, Luxembourg foresees the right for illegally employed TCNs to make a claim against their employer, including in cases in which they have, or have been, returned. This claim falls under the general provisions concerning the right to bring a case before civil courts. The Labour Code establishes that the employer who has employed an irregular staying third-country national must pay to the third-country national the following amounts: 1) salaries and any other emoluments, which a similar employee would have benefited for the same employment; 2) the total amount of outstanding remuneration as well as the cost of the transfer of these amounts to the third-country national to the country to which s/he is returned; 3) the total amount of unpaid social contributions and taxes, including administrative fines, as well as, court and legal fees. In addition, the Labour Code establishes that the third-country national who has been illegally employed before the execution of any return decision has to be systematically and objectively informed by the control agents of his/her rights to recover the outstanding remunerations and back payments, as well as the right to benefit from free of charge legal aid in order to attempt a recovery action against the employer, even if the third-country national has already been returned. Labour unions can support and assist TCNs in legal proceedings related to social and labour law, provided that they have been given a mandate to do so. Eventual costs of administrative and civil proceedings can be taken in charge by the labour unions if the TCN is a member of the respective labour union. The Law does not establish fines against TCN’s who were illegally employed. The TCN may be issued a return decision and lose his/her residence rights; however, the Directorate of immigration processes these situations on a case-by-case basis and inform the persons concerned to terminate the illegal employment situation.
Year 2017
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84 Report

Organizing the Unorganizable: Unions, NGOs, and Indonesian Migrant Labour

Authors M Ford
Year 2004
Journal Name International Migration
Citations (WoS) 24
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85 Journal Article

Trade Union Learning Strategies and Migrant Workers

Authors Robert Perrett, Miguel Martínez Lucio, Jo McBride, ...
Year 2012
Journal Name Urban Studies
Citations (WoS) 6
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86 Journal Article

Regulating Movement of the Very Mobile: Selected Legal and Policy Aspects of Ukrainian Migration to EU Countries

Authors Monika Szulecka
Book Title Ukrainian Migration to the European Union
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87 Book Chapter

„Kryzys ukraiński ” – czy konieczność redefinicji polskiej polityki imigracyjnej?

Authors Maciej Duszczyk
Year 2021
Journal Name Politeja
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89 Journal Article

‘Taking on almost everyone?’ Migrant and employer recruitment strategies in a booming labour market

Authors Elaine Moriarty, James Wickham, Torben Krings, ...
Year 2012
Journal Name The International Journal of Human Resource Management
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90 Journal Article

Employer-sponsored temporary labour migration schemes in Australia, Canada and Sweden: enhancing efficiency, compromising fairness?

Authors Chris F. Wright, Dimitria Groutsis, Diane van den Broek
Year 2016
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 8
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91 Journal Article

Labour market regulation and the demand for migrant labour: A comparison of the adult social care sector in England and the Netherlands

Authors Stefania Marino, Arjan Keizer
Year 2023
Journal Name European Journal of Industrial Relations
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92 Journal Article

The hospitality sector as an employer of skill discounted migrants. Evidence from Australia

Authors Gerrit J. M. Treuren, Ashokkumar Manoharan, Vidya Vishnu
Year 2019
Journal Name JOURNAL OF POLICY RESEARCH IN TOURISM LEISURE AND EVENTS
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93 Journal Article

A New Portrait of Indentured Labour: Vietnamese Labour Migration to Malaysia

Authors Le Thu Huong
Year 2010
Journal Name Asian Journal of Social Science
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94 Journal Article

The persistence of wages

Authors Anabela Carneiro, Pedro Portugal, Pedro Raposo, ...
Year 2023
Citations (WoS) 1
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95 Journal Article

Workplace Concentration of Immigrants

Authors Fredrik Andersson, Monica Garcia-Perez, John Haltiwanger, ...
Year 2014
Journal Name Demography
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96 Journal Article

Demand in the context of trafficking in human beings in the domestic work sector in Cyprus

Authors Danai ANGELI
Description
Domestic work has been of particular significance in the Cypriot labour market and in particular its migrant workforce. Over the past two decades, thousands of migrant women have flown into the country to work as domestic workers for private households. Most of them stay in the country for several years, on a so-called “domestic worker’s” visa, a rather restrictive kind of permit that ties them to specific employers. A standard employment contract, prepared by the Migration Department lays down their wages, duties and rights; one of these being the prohibition to join trade unions. Throughout this process, potential domestic workers are normally aided by private employment agencies that act as intermediates with the employer – often at a very high fee. The overall setting aims to balance diverse and sometimes conflicting interests within a small economy and society, bound by its international commitments. To the external observer, however, Cyprus seems to be contradicting its own efforts. Its migration scheme appears in multiple ways susceptible to misuse. Stories about exploitation and abuse are indeed not uncommon. In many respects however, Cyprus’ case brings to the fore existing gaps and loopholes when the EU common standards are transposed into the national order.
Year 2016
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97 Report

Employer policies and the immigrant-native earnings gap

Authors Benoit Dostie, Jiang Li, David Card, ...
Year 2023
Citations (WoS) 9
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98 Journal Article

Decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States on Constitutional Questions: 1914–1917. III

Authors Thomas Reed Powell
Year 1918
Journal Name American Political Science Review
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99 Journal Article

Non-salary employment conditions as a factor shaping migration decision-making: an example of workers from Ukraine in Poland

Authors Maciej Duszczyk, Kamil Matuszczyk
Year 2022
Journal Name MIGRATION LETTERS
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100 Journal Article
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