This article explores migrant workers’ experiences of organisational control while undertaking temporary agency work. This study is based on a ‘covert’ ethnographic study set at a temporary employment agency that short-term contracts workers to the catering and hospitality industry. The findings show how control is perceived by workers to emerge from the over-recruitment, coupled with the allocation of work through an informal ranking system. Migrant workers’ specific socio-economic circumstances and their race and gender identities informed their responses to these systems, resulting in the buy-in to discourses of enterprise. The result was actors who are complicit, if not active, participants in self and peer regulation. As such, this art...
Purpose: The influx of migrant workers in the UK has widespread interest. This group's experien...
This article examines the creation of informal workplace hierarchies in the context of recent change...
The recent growth of precarious work has sparked a vivid debate on whether this tendency can be reve...
This article explores migrant workers’ experiences of organisational control while undertaking tempo...
This article explores migrant workers’ experiences of organisational control while undertaking tempo...
Migrant workers have long constituted a fundamental part of the hospitality sector in the UK. Taking...
Migrant workers have long constituted a fundamental part of the hospitality sector in the UK. Taking...
This article engages with IHRM debates on the transnational regulation of labour, exploring how migr...
Migrant workers tend to cluster in particular industries, occupations and geographical areas and to ...
The following chapter explores the commodification of migrant workers from post-socialist EU Accessi...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis. Temporary workers in low-skilled roles often experience ‘hard’ HRM practi...
This article investigates the role of temporary work agencies (TWAs) at Foxconn\u2019s assembly plan...
This article explores workers’ experiences of flexibility, control, and autonomy in organisations wi...
This thesis examines the role of migrant civil society organisations (CSOs) in the regulation of wor...
Regulatory frameworks on intra-EU mobility and flexible cross-border employment relations have stim...
Purpose: The influx of migrant workers in the UK has widespread interest. This group's experien...
This article examines the creation of informal workplace hierarchies in the context of recent change...
The recent growth of precarious work has sparked a vivid debate on whether this tendency can be reve...
This article explores migrant workers’ experiences of organisational control while undertaking tempo...
This article explores migrant workers’ experiences of organisational control while undertaking tempo...
Migrant workers have long constituted a fundamental part of the hospitality sector in the UK. Taking...
Migrant workers have long constituted a fundamental part of the hospitality sector in the UK. Taking...
This article engages with IHRM debates on the transnational regulation of labour, exploring how migr...
Migrant workers tend to cluster in particular industries, occupations and geographical areas and to ...
The following chapter explores the commodification of migrant workers from post-socialist EU Accessi...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis. Temporary workers in low-skilled roles often experience ‘hard’ HRM practi...
This article investigates the role of temporary work agencies (TWAs) at Foxconn\u2019s assembly plan...
This article explores workers’ experiences of flexibility, control, and autonomy in organisations wi...
This thesis examines the role of migrant civil society organisations (CSOs) in the regulation of wor...
Regulatory frameworks on intra-EU mobility and flexible cross-border employment relations have stim...
Purpose: The influx of migrant workers in the UK has widespread interest. This group's experien...
This article examines the creation of informal workplace hierarchies in the context of recent change...
The recent growth of precarious work has sparked a vivid debate on whether this tendency can be reve...