Migrant worker policies and national privilege: A UK case study

After a long period of decline in the Global North, migrant worker policies are making a comeback on the agenda of the European Union and several of its member states. Inspired by Iris Marion Young and Nancy Fraser’s accounts of structural injustice, this article argues that such policies cannot be...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pier-Luc Dupont
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Deusto 2021-06-01
Series:Deusto Journal of Human Rights
Subjects:
Online Access:https://djhr.revistas.deusto.es/article/view/2114
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spelling doaj-2447ff343a9d4e929e267bb275febd3e2021-06-29T20:07:22ZengUniversity of DeustoDeusto Journal of Human Rights2530-42752603-60022021-06-01710.18543/djhr.2114Migrant worker policies and national privilege: A UK case studyPier-Luc Dupont0University of Bristol, UK After a long period of decline in the Global North, migrant worker policies are making a comeback on the agenda of the European Union and several of its member states. Inspired by Iris Marion Young and Nancy Fraser’s accounts of structural injustice, this article argues that such policies cannot be reconciled with the principle of equality between migrant and national workers enshrined in international legal instruments such as the Convention on Migrant Workers and the EU Seasonal Workers Directive. To make this point it draws on a selection of UK based empirical literature as well as primary data from a recent study on domestic workers admitted to the UK under temporary visas since 1998. Results suggest that such visas tend to push migrants’ working conditions downwards (exploitation); prevent them from changing employer, enforcing rights in court or mobilising in unions (domination); and ultimately exacerbate racial conflict and stereotyping (stigmatisation). Received: 10 February 2021 Accepted: 14 May 2021 https://djhr.revistas.deusto.es/article/view/2114migrant workershuman rightsdiscriminationracismexploitationdomination
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pier-Luc Dupont
spellingShingle Pier-Luc Dupont
Migrant worker policies and national privilege: A UK case study
Deusto Journal of Human Rights
migrant workers
human rights
discrimination
racism
exploitation
domination
author_facet Pier-Luc Dupont
author_sort Pier-Luc Dupont
title Migrant worker policies and national privilege: A UK case study
title_short Migrant worker policies and national privilege: A UK case study
title_full Migrant worker policies and national privilege: A UK case study
title_fullStr Migrant worker policies and national privilege: A UK case study
title_full_unstemmed Migrant worker policies and national privilege: A UK case study
title_sort migrant worker policies and national privilege: a uk case study
publisher University of Deusto
series Deusto Journal of Human Rights
issn 2530-4275
2603-6002
publishDate 2021-06-01
description After a long period of decline in the Global North, migrant worker policies are making a comeback on the agenda of the European Union and several of its member states. Inspired by Iris Marion Young and Nancy Fraser’s accounts of structural injustice, this article argues that such policies cannot be reconciled with the principle of equality between migrant and national workers enshrined in international legal instruments such as the Convention on Migrant Workers and the EU Seasonal Workers Directive. To make this point it draws on a selection of UK based empirical literature as well as primary data from a recent study on domestic workers admitted to the UK under temporary visas since 1998. Results suggest that such visas tend to push migrants’ working conditions downwards (exploitation); prevent them from changing employer, enforcing rights in court or mobilising in unions (domination); and ultimately exacerbate racial conflict and stereotyping (stigmatisation). Received: 10 February 2021 Accepted: 14 May 2021
topic migrant workers
human rights
discrimination
racism
exploitation
domination
url https://djhr.revistas.deusto.es/article/view/2114
work_keys_str_mv AT pierlucdupont migrantworkerpoliciesandnationalprivilegeaukcasestudy
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