More than a million people work in the UK social care sector; residential care homes, or providing care to people in their own homes. Care workers, particularly those employed through agencies and gangmasters, are extremely vulnerable to exploitation in this low-paid, low-status sector - and migrant workers are often the most vulnerable. In this paper, we examine the nature of exploitation of migrant care workers in the care sector, made possible by the lack of an effective employment rights enforcement regime. We call for the urgent extension of the Gangmasters Licensing Authority (GLA) to cover the regulation of agencies in the sector - as effective regulation of agencies will be a significant step in protecting care workers and ensuring ...
Abstract Background Home care workers work in an isolated environment, with limited supervision and ...
Homecare is a major source of women’s low-wage employment in the UK. Practices of unpaid working tim...
Migrant workers often enter the UK in the hope of finding a better life – the truth is often far fro...
More than a million people work in the UK social care sector – in residential care home...
On 5 February 2004, 23 Chinese cockle pickers drowned in rising tides in Morecambe Bay because of th...
Many EU-8 migrant workers work in low-skilled, low paid jobs, particularly sectors such as food proc...
Over the past decade a team at the University of Hull has undertaken four separate but linked resear...
This chapter focuses on ethnographic data to look at the experiences of migrant care workers employe...
The plights of migrant domestic workers from historical and legal perspective appear to be internati...
The rights and interests of carers, and those in receipt of care, are related, directly and indirect...
The Gangmasters (Licensing) Act was introduced in 2004 to curb exploitative and fraudulent activitie...
The provision of care is an increasingly pressing issue in the Global North. With an ageing populati...
The employment of migrant workers in long-term care is increasingly evident across western welfare s...
Response to the ATR debate proposition ‘It is worth undermining the anti-trafficking cause in order ...
This paper examines how immigration policies on migrant care workers are both pragmatic ‘policy solu...
Abstract Background Home care workers work in an isolated environment, with limited supervision and ...
Homecare is a major source of women’s low-wage employment in the UK. Practices of unpaid working tim...
Migrant workers often enter the UK in the hope of finding a better life – the truth is often far fro...
More than a million people work in the UK social care sector – in residential care home...
On 5 February 2004, 23 Chinese cockle pickers drowned in rising tides in Morecambe Bay because of th...
Many EU-8 migrant workers work in low-skilled, low paid jobs, particularly sectors such as food proc...
Over the past decade a team at the University of Hull has undertaken four separate but linked resear...
This chapter focuses on ethnographic data to look at the experiences of migrant care workers employe...
The plights of migrant domestic workers from historical and legal perspective appear to be internati...
The rights and interests of carers, and those in receipt of care, are related, directly and indirect...
The Gangmasters (Licensing) Act was introduced in 2004 to curb exploitative and fraudulent activitie...
The provision of care is an increasingly pressing issue in the Global North. With an ageing populati...
The employment of migrant workers in long-term care is increasingly evident across western welfare s...
Response to the ATR debate proposition ‘It is worth undermining the anti-trafficking cause in order ...
This paper examines how immigration policies on migrant care workers are both pragmatic ‘policy solu...
Abstract Background Home care workers work in an isolated environment, with limited supervision and ...
Homecare is a major source of women’s low-wage employment in the UK. Practices of unpaid working tim...
Migrant workers often enter the UK in the hope of finding a better life – the truth is often far fro...