EU migrants nominally enjoy the same employment rights as Britons. Yet (left to right) Catherine Barnard, Amy Ludlow and Sarah Fraser Butlin of the EU Migrant Worker Project found that they are often ignorant of the minimum wage and the Working Time Directive and do not pursue claims in Employment Tribunals. In this they are sometimes aided and abetted by exploitative employers who are willing to use them to undercut the wages of UK staff. They also found that enforcement of employment rights in the UK is, at best, patchy
The UK could make both Britons and EU migrants wait four years before having access to in-work benef...
The use of the term ‘migrant’ supports a particular construction of the legal subject of labour law,...
This article focuses on migration within the European Union, exploring the gradual restriction of ri...
Many EU-8 migrant workers work in low-skilled, low paid jobs, particularly sectors such as food proc...
Migrant workers often enter the UK in the hope of finding a better life – the truth is often far fro...
As migrant workers, EU-8 nationals enjoy a right to equal treatment with nationals in respect of the...
This report explores the employment experiences of migrants from East and Central Europe, and review...
Using nationally representative workplace data for Britain we identify where migrants work and exami...
Studies of the minimum wage, particularly of its impact on the labour market, have raised interestin...
Migrant workers often enter the UK in the hope of finding a better life – the truth is often far fro...
The vast majority of asylum seekers and irregular migrants in Britain are forbidden from working, ho...
As the last traces of EU citizenship disappear, the definitional boundary between work and inactivit...
After a long period of decline in the Global North, migrant worker policies are making a comeback on...
Using nationally representative workplace data for Britain we identify the partial correlation betwe...
When you try to figure out what the EU has ever done for workers’ rights, the internet can be a conf...
The UK could make both Britons and EU migrants wait four years before having access to in-work benef...
The use of the term ‘migrant’ supports a particular construction of the legal subject of labour law,...
This article focuses on migration within the European Union, exploring the gradual restriction of ri...
Many EU-8 migrant workers work in low-skilled, low paid jobs, particularly sectors such as food proc...
Migrant workers often enter the UK in the hope of finding a better life – the truth is often far fro...
As migrant workers, EU-8 nationals enjoy a right to equal treatment with nationals in respect of the...
This report explores the employment experiences of migrants from East and Central Europe, and review...
Using nationally representative workplace data for Britain we identify where migrants work and exami...
Studies of the minimum wage, particularly of its impact on the labour market, have raised interestin...
Migrant workers often enter the UK in the hope of finding a better life – the truth is often far fro...
The vast majority of asylum seekers and irregular migrants in Britain are forbidden from working, ho...
As the last traces of EU citizenship disappear, the definitional boundary between work and inactivit...
After a long period of decline in the Global North, migrant worker policies are making a comeback on...
Using nationally representative workplace data for Britain we identify the partial correlation betwe...
When you try to figure out what the EU has ever done for workers’ rights, the internet can be a conf...
The UK could make both Britons and EU migrants wait four years before having access to in-work benef...
The use of the term ‘migrant’ supports a particular construction of the legal subject of labour law,...
This article focuses on migration within the European Union, exploring the gradual restriction of ri...