The use of the term ‘migrant’ supports a particular construction of the legal subject of labour law, whereby the exclusion of some from recognition as ‘citizen nationals’ justifies exclusion from a formal employment relationship. Being outside of a formal employment relationship renders ‘migrants’ useful and necessary as precarious labourers in the current globalised economic market. This paper examines UK labour and migration law to raise theoretical questions underpinning a current crisis of labour law
This article focuses on migration within the European Union, exploring the gradual restriction of ri...
This paper will explore the work status of the EU migrants in temporary jobs, drawing on the data ob...
Undocumented migrants are usually conceptualised as individuals who have crossed borders illegally, ...
This book will be of interest to law students, legal philosophers, theoretical philosophers, politic...
Abstract Migrants in the UK from the Central and Eastern European states that acceded...
From the Introduction. The question of when EU citizens should be able to work, live, and claim bene...
The purpose of this chapter is survey EU migration and asylum law from a labour law perspective. A l...
Guestworker programmes have typically referred to programmes of a temporary nature, where guests are...
This thesis is concerned with the ways in which the laws and policies governing labour migration sha...
The number of migrants arriving in the UK from the EU accession countries has been higher than proje...
The chapters in this book cover different aspects of the migrant experience of social life and emplo...
The aim of this article is to assess the connections between the continued expansion of forms of ins...
As the last traces of EU citizenship disappear, the definitional boundary between work and inactivit...
Advocates of the “borderless world” thesis suggest that migrant workers can benefit from employment ...
EU migrants nominally enjoy the same employment rights as Britons. Yet (left to right) Catherine Bar...
This article focuses on migration within the European Union, exploring the gradual restriction of ri...
This paper will explore the work status of the EU migrants in temporary jobs, drawing on the data ob...
Undocumented migrants are usually conceptualised as individuals who have crossed borders illegally, ...
This book will be of interest to law students, legal philosophers, theoretical philosophers, politic...
Abstract Migrants in the UK from the Central and Eastern European states that acceded...
From the Introduction. The question of when EU citizens should be able to work, live, and claim bene...
The purpose of this chapter is survey EU migration and asylum law from a labour law perspective. A l...
Guestworker programmes have typically referred to programmes of a temporary nature, where guests are...
This thesis is concerned with the ways in which the laws and policies governing labour migration sha...
The number of migrants arriving in the UK from the EU accession countries has been higher than proje...
The chapters in this book cover different aspects of the migrant experience of social life and emplo...
The aim of this article is to assess the connections between the continued expansion of forms of ins...
As the last traces of EU citizenship disappear, the definitional boundary between work and inactivit...
Advocates of the “borderless world” thesis suggest that migrant workers can benefit from employment ...
EU migrants nominally enjoy the same employment rights as Britons. Yet (left to right) Catherine Bar...
This article focuses on migration within the European Union, exploring the gradual restriction of ri...
This paper will explore the work status of the EU migrants in temporary jobs, drawing on the data ob...
Undocumented migrants are usually conceptualised as individuals who have crossed borders illegally, ...