This article presents a normative account of citizenship which requires respect for labour rights, as much as it requires respect for other human rights. The exclusion of certain categories of workers, such as domestic workers, from these rights is wrong. This article presents domestic workers as marginal citizens who are unfairly deprived of certain labour rights in national legal orders. It also shows that international human rights law counteracts the marginal legal status of this group of workers. By being attached to everyone simply by virtue of being human, irrespective of nationality, human rights can complement citizenship rights when both are viewed as normative standards. The example of domestic work as it has been approached in i...
This article examines how international human rights law is shaping the politics of immigration. It...
Beleaguered labour movement advocates are turning to the “labour rights as human rights” framing to ...
Domestic workers, who perform labour such as cooking, cleaning and care for children and the elderly...
Migrant workers claims for greater protection in a globalized world are typically expressed either i...
This article explores the effects of the legalization of international human rights on citizens and ...
The emergence of the European Union citizenship agenda has mainly taken place along the evolution of...
Yes, it’s true: Workers are human, they are not commodities, they are not factors of production. Peo...
This article engages the contemporary transformation of international labour normativity by refocusi...
“World community has entered into the varying degrees in to a universal community and violation of r...
This article examines the relationship between human rights and labour law. It first explores the re...
We live in an increasingly polarized world: one summed up by President Clinton, “we’re all in this t...
Migrant domestic workers are estimated at approximately 11.5 million persons worldwide. European wom...
In this article, I depart from the factual difficulties of undocumented migrants to access a state’s...
This article discusses asylum seekers and the right to work in the UK. Differential access to the la...
This article discusses asylum seekers and the right to work in the UK. Differential access to the la...
This article examines how international human rights law is shaping the politics of immigration. It...
Beleaguered labour movement advocates are turning to the “labour rights as human rights” framing to ...
Domestic workers, who perform labour such as cooking, cleaning and care for children and the elderly...
Migrant workers claims for greater protection in a globalized world are typically expressed either i...
This article explores the effects of the legalization of international human rights on citizens and ...
The emergence of the European Union citizenship agenda has mainly taken place along the evolution of...
Yes, it’s true: Workers are human, they are not commodities, they are not factors of production. Peo...
This article engages the contemporary transformation of international labour normativity by refocusi...
“World community has entered into the varying degrees in to a universal community and violation of r...
This article examines the relationship between human rights and labour law. It first explores the re...
We live in an increasingly polarized world: one summed up by President Clinton, “we’re all in this t...
Migrant domestic workers are estimated at approximately 11.5 million persons worldwide. European wom...
In this article, I depart from the factual difficulties of undocumented migrants to access a state’s...
This article discusses asylum seekers and the right to work in the UK. Differential access to the la...
This article discusses asylum seekers and the right to work in the UK. Differential access to the la...
This article examines how international human rights law is shaping the politics of immigration. It...
Beleaguered labour movement advocates are turning to the “labour rights as human rights” framing to ...
Domestic workers, who perform labour such as cooking, cleaning and care for children and the elderly...