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Labor Movement: How Migration Regulates Labor Markets

Harald Bauder
- 01 Jan 2006 - 
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TLDR
Bauder as discussed by the authors investigates how migration regulates labor markets, rather than labor markets shaping migration flows, and illustrates how different legal, social and cultural strategies towards international migrants are deployed and coordinated within the wider neo-liberal project to render migrants and immigrants vulnerable, pushing them into distinct economic roles and into subordinate labor market situations.
Abstract
Throughout the industrialized world, international migrants serve as nannies, construction workers, gardeners and small-business entrepreneurs. Labor Movement suggests that the international migration of workers is necessary for the survival of industrialized economies. The book thus turns the conventional view of international migration on its head: it investigates how migration regulates labor markets, rather than labor markets shaping migration flows. Assuming a critical view of orthodox economic theory, the book illustrates how different legal, social and cultural strategies towards international migrants are deployed and coordinated within the wider neo-liberal project to render migrants and immigrants vulnerable, pushing them into performing distinct economic roles and into subordinate labor market situations. Drawing on social theories associated with Pierre Bourdieu and other prominent thinkers, Labor Movement suggests that migration regulates labor markets through processes of social distinction, cultural judgement and the strategic deployment of citizenship. European and North American case studies illustrate how the labor of international migrants is systematically devalued and how popular discourse legitimates the demotion of migrants to subordinate labor. Engaging with various immigrant groups in different cities, including South Asian immigrants in Vancouver, foreigners and Spataussiedler in Berlin, and Mexican and Caribbean offshore workers in rural Ontario, the studies seek to unravel the complex web of regulatory labor market processes related to international migration. Recognizing and understanding these processes, Bauder argues, is an important step towards building effective activist strategies and for envisioning new roles for migrating workers and people. The book is a valuable resource to researchers and students in economics, ethnic and migration studies, geography, sociology, political science, and to frontline activists in Europe, North America and beyond.

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Migration, immigration controls and the fashioning of precarious workers:

TL;DR: In particular, the construction of institutionalised uncertainty, together with less formalised migratory processes, help produce "precarious workers" over whom employers and labour users have particular mechanisms of control as discussed by the authors.
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New Keywords: Migration and Borders

TL;DR: New Keywords: Migration and Borders as discussed by the authors is a collaborative writing project aimed at developing a nexus of terms and concepts that fill-out the contemporary problematic of migration, which moves beyond traditional and critical migration studies by building on cultural studies and post-colonial analyses by drawing on a diverse set of longstanding author engagements with migrant movements.
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The International Mobility of Academics: A Labour Market Perspective

TL;DR: In this paper, Bauder et al. argue that academic labour operates in a separate labour market in which the experiences of international mobility differ from the experiences workers have in other occupations and explore how academic labour is valorized and devalued in the migration process.
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Intensification of workplace regimes in British horticulture: the role of migrant workers

TL;DR: This paper explored the causes of the dramatic increase since the 1990s in the employment of migrant workers in this sub-sector and found that international migrants have very recently become the major workforce in labour-intensive agriculture.

The gaze of autonomy: capitalism, migration and social struggles

TL;DR: The autonomy of migration approach in this regard needs to be understood as a distinct perspective from which to view the "politics of mobility" as discussed by the authors, one that emphasizes the subjective stakes within the struggles and clashes that constitute the field of such a politics.