Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-t5tsf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-13T02:37:52.502Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Migration and Differential Labour Market Participation: Theoretical Directions, Recurring Themes, Implications of Brexit and Areas for Future Research

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2017

Gina Netto
Affiliation:
The Urban Institute, Heriot Watt University E-mail: G.Netto@hw.ac.uk
Gary Craig
Affiliation:
Wilberforce Institute for the study of Slavery and Emancipation, University of Hull E-mail: G.Craig@hull.ac.uk
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Extensive research in a number of disciplines, including economics, social policy, sociology, geography and management have been undertaken relating to migrant participation in the labour market. Given the highly topical nature of migrant employment in Western Europe and the US, the aim of this brief review is to draw together some of the more recent attempts to theorise on the presence of migrants in the labour market, discuss some of the recurrent themes that have emerged from empirical research in this area, consider some of the main implications for policy-making in what now seems likely to be known as the post-Brexit era and outline areas for future research. In doing so, the intention is to contribute to further inter-disciplinary theory-building and to a more nuanced understanding of the complexity of this highly politicised area and the implications of migrant employment for policy and future research.

Type
Themed Section on Migration and Differential Labour Market Participation
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017 

Introduction

Extensive research in a number of disciplines, including economics, social policy, sociology, geography and management have been undertaken relating to migrant participation in the labour market. Given the highly topical nature of migrant employment in Western Europe and the US, the aim of this brief review is to draw together some of the more recent attempts to theorise on the presence of migrants in the labour market, discuss some of the recurrent themes that have emerged from empirical research in this area, consider some of the main implications for policy-making in what now seems likely to be known as the post-Brexit era and outline areas for future research. In doing so, the intention is to contribute to further inter-disciplinary theory-building and to a more nuanced understanding of the complexity of this highly politicised area and the implications of migrant employment for policy and future research.

Theorising migrants in the labour market

In this section, we explore some of the significant attempts, spanning from the post-war era to Brexit, to theorise and explain the position of migrants in the labour market, with a particular focus on the UK. In doing so, we focus on the dynamics within receiving countries, while acknowledging the importance of understanding the multiple factors which contribute to decisions to migrate within sending countries and the interplay between these factors and experiences in destination countries. We acknowledge that migration to European countries considerably predates the Second World War, but it is nevertheless the case that the major thrust of debates about immigration have emerged in the post-war period and particularly, as the numbers of those migrating became significant in relation to settled populations, in the past twenty years (Craig, forthcoming).

Neoclassical economic theory, which is based on the underlying assumption that migration is stimulated primarily by rational economic considerations of relative benefits and costs, has played an influential role in migration research (Greve, Reference Greve, Carmel, Cerami and Papadopoulos2011; Kurekova, Reference Kurekova2011). Within such accounts, economic factors such as differences in income or living standards between sending and receiving countries are prominent factors in explaining migratory patterns (Greve, Reference Greve, Carmel, Cerami and Papadopoulos2011). Demand for labour and factors affecting supply are also recognised as influencing these patterns. Demand factors relating to the performance of the economy and the expansion or contraction of (parts of) the economy, employers’ racialised attitudes towards migrant workers and the geographical distribution of employment opportunities help to explain why migrants are heavily represented in certain sectors of the economy and in some geographical areas. These patterns change considerably over time. Supply factors relating to human capital in the form of skills, knowledge and experience or educational qualifications and the ‘work ethic’ that migrants bring with them also contribute to explaining patterns of employment. However, such factors alone are clearly limited. For instance, the definition of ‘skills’ is heavily contested and there is well-documented evidence of the under-utilisation of migrant skills, knowledge and experience as some of the articles here demonstrate (see also Netto et al., Reference Netto, Hudson, Noon, Sosenko, de Lima and Kamenou-Aigbekaen2015).

Boswell (Reference Boswell2008) has argued that while economic methodologies can be usefully applied within interdisciplinary research on migration, some of the main assumptions which underpin economic theories relating to migration are flawed. These include methodological individualism, that is, a tendency to focus on the individual as the unit of analysis, the uniformity of rationality and the view of individuals as utility-maximising. Instead, she argues that more attention should be paid to the social context in which decisions about migration are made, and which impact on the opportunities and constraints that migrants face in the labour market. Reinforcing the importance of social and political contexts, Greve (Reference Greve, Carmel, Cerami and Papadopoulos2011) has argued that it is also important to examine the ways in which the labour market is regulated as well as the various reasons for migration, which include traditional ‘push’ and ‘pull’ factors.

Within migration research, the relationship between structure and agency has been extensively studied, with Bakewell (Reference Bakewell2010) suggesting that critical realist approaches may offer fruitful lines of further enquiry. Multi-level approaches have provided the opportunity to reveal the complexity of migration participation in the labour market by revealing the interaction of structure and agency at various levels (see, for instance, Kamenou et al., Reference Kamenou, Netto and Fearful2012; Netto et al., Reference Netto, Hudson, Noon, Sosenko, de Lima and Kamenou-Aigbekaen2015). Macro-level factors include the supra-national factors of globalisation, which act to ‘pull’ migrants to certain destinations, or the historical relationships between sending and receiving countries, for example those arising out of colonialism or geographical proximity. At a national level, they include immigration policies, labour market shortages, cultural norms, linguistic factors and the presence of established migrant communities. Meso-level factors have included household dynamics, which may contribute to gendered patterns of migration (e.g. Hoang, Reference Hoang2011), or organisational factors, such as employer attitudes to migrant women, or equal opportunities policies (Kamenou et al., Reference Kamenou, Netto and Fearful2012). The micro-level factors that are studied may include the career aspirations and decision-making processes of migrants themselves (Christensen and Guldvik, Reference Christensen and Guldvik2014).

Within this broader landscape of attempts to theorise labour migration, we can place the attempts of scholars working within the sociology of race or ethnicity to identify and explain racialised or ethnicised inequalities in employment outcomes. Within the UK context, the Fourth National Survey of Ethnic Minorities, carried out in 1994, was the first study to map the changing employment profile of minority groups who had been encouraged by the government to migrate to the country in the post-war era due to labour shortages (Modood, Reference Modood, Modood, Berthoud, Lakey, Nazroo, Smith, Virdee and Beishon1997). This study revealed that while similar proportions of ‘white’ and Indian men were in non-manual work, men of Caribbean, Pakistani and Bangladeshi origin continued to be over-represented in manual jobs compared to white men and those of African and Indian origins. Modood (Reference Modood, Modood, Berthoud, Lakey, Nazroo, Smith, Virdee and Beishon1997) explained these differences by drawing on the extensively documented concept of ‘ethnic penalty’ (Heath and McMahon, Reference Heath and McMahon1995: 1), that is ‘sources of disadvantage that might lead an ethnic group to fare less well in the labour market compared to similarly qualified whites . . . although discrimination is likely to be a major component’. However, the study stressed that this alone was not sufficient to explain the labour market disadvantage experienced by some groups. Other explanatory factors were the impact of economic restructuring, which resulted in the loss of jobs in manufacturing in which some ethnic groups were concentrated – again often for historical reasons – and the different levels of educational achievement among these groups.

More recently, Virdee (Reference Virdee2006) has argued that the geographical distribution of different minority groups, anti-racist activism and racism were also significant contributory factors in explaining the labour market outcomes of various ethnic groups within the labour market. Focusing on the persistent labour market disadvantage of Bangladeshi men, Salway (Reference Salway2008) has revealed that strong forces of inclusion within the Bangladeshi community interact with forces of exclusion from ‘mainstream’ society to constrain aspirations and limit opportunities. In order better to understand labour market outcomes, she argues that this calls for greater understanding of the ways in which ethnic identity influences access to resources and opportunities in different contexts. Within organisational contexts, Kenny and Briner (Reference Kenny and Briner2013) have examined how ethnicity is actually experienced within organisations by British Black Caribbean employees, and identified increases in ethnic identity salience at work and responses to such increases. Relatedly, Hudson et al. (Reference Hudson, Netto, Noon, Sosenko, de Lima and Kamenou-Aigbekaen2017) explore the consequences of social homophily – the tendency to associate and bond with people who are similar – in privileging the labour market opportunities of some and eroding those of others.

Reflecting a growing interest in the role of gender in migration, scholars have found that within a complex constellation of social relations, this dimension of identity plays a strong role in determining ‘who stays, who moves, where, why and how often’ (Kofman, Reference Kofman2004; Donato et al., Reference Donato, Gabaccia, Holdaway, Manalansan and Pessar2006) as well as ‘what they do once they get there’ (Mushaben, Reference Mushaben2009). An important insight from the study of migrant women is that gendered relations are always mediated by other socially constructed categories, such as ‘race’, ethnicity, class and nationality, and that, conversely, the analysis of these categories needs to be advanced by examining its gendered aspects (Anthias and Yuval-Davis, Reference Anthias and Yuval-Davis1992; Lutz, Reference Lutz2010). This is exemplified in Salway's (Reference Salway2007) study of Bangladeshi and Pakistani women, which found that although economic activity was far more common among well-qualified Bangladeshi and Pakistani women than those without such qualifications, marriage and young children still significantly inhibit economic activity. The possession of basic qualifications was not sufficient to ensure access to jobs, suggesting that gendered roles are not challenged unless women from these ethnic groups have sufficient human capital to compete for high status, well-paid employment. Nuanced insights such as these, which are generated from considering the intersection of multiple dimensions of identity, are now explored using the concept of ‘intersectionality’ (Crenshaw, Reference Crenshaw1989), including within the workplace (McBride et al., Reference McBride, Hebson and Holgate2015; Mooney, Reference Mooney2016). This necessarily brief review of some significant attempts to theorise migrants in the labour market indicates the value of multi-disciplinary and multi-levelled approaches and the importance of methodologies and analysis that are sensitive to the complex ways in which ethnicity interacts with other dimensions of identity within the workplace and other social contexts that influence the position of migrants in the labour market. It also points to the continuing lacunae in our understanding of the interaction between migrant status and nationality, ethnicity, class, gender, disability and sexual or religious orientation on experiences in the labour market.

Recurrent themes

Impact of migration on local economies

Craig (Reference Craig2015) has found that the weight of available valid research evidence (Glover et al., Reference Glover, Gott, Loizillon, Portes, Price, Spender, Srinivasan and Willis2003; Somerville and Sumption, Reference Somerville and Sumption2008; Lucchino et al., Reference Lucchino, Rosazza-Bondibene and Portes2012; Dustmann and Frattini, Reference Dustmann and Frattini2013) does not support the view that migrants have displaced host country nationals from jobs, although there may be a few very specific situations in which such displacement has taken place. Somerville and Sumption (Reference Somerville and Sumption2008) have found, for example, that the impact of immigration on wage levels is small, and concentrated. Where immigration has negative impacts, this tends to be in those sectors that do not require forms of country-specific human capital, such as fluency in English, cultural knowledge or local experience, and in which it is easier for immigrants to find work. These findings highlight the importance of ‘more fine-grained analysis’ of the labour market. Overall, in contrast to the picture presented by sections of the media, the impact of migrants in terms of the economy tends to be positive.

Labour market segmentation

The over-representation of migrants and ethnic minorities in low-paid work is well-established (Low Pay Commission, 2013; European Commission, 2014). Within the UK context, Pakistanis and Bangladeshis and some recent migrants tend to be over-represented in low-paid work, although there is considerable polarisation between and within groups (Brynin and Güveli, Reference Brynin and Güveli2012). Anderson and Ruhs (Reference Anderson, Ruhs, Anderson and Ruhs2010) have argued that migrants’ willingness to accept low pay and poorer terms and conditions are dominant factors that help explain their presence in particular parts of the labour market. This has led Anderson and Ruhs (Reference Anderson and Ruhs2012) to argue that, in order to reduce employer reliance on migrant workers and to counter claims that these workers are under-cutting wages and working conditions for other workers, fundamental changes need to be made to the policies and institutions that create demand for migrant labour. These include greater labour market regulation, more investment in education and training, better wages and conditions in some low-waged public sector jobs, improved job status and career tracks and a decline in low-waged agency work. Unfortunately, the trend has been in the other direction, with the UK in particular now becoming one of the least regulated labour markets within OECD countries (Bell and Elliott, Reference Bell and Elliott2016).

Lack of social protection and increasing labour market precarity

The International Organisation of Migration (2010) has argued that a major agenda that remains for most countries lies in ensuring universal workers’ rights, including the right to belong to a trade union, employment protection and the removal of barriers to participating in the labour market. They noted that most countries perform better on ensuring equal access to the labour market and employment security (although even this is poor for some groups of migrants) than actually facilitating entry into the labour market. Consequently, the rewards of employment are thus not available to migrants due to their inability to surmount the barriers facing them, including discrimination, eligibility restrictions and language fluency (Behtoui, Reference Behtoui2013). Further, specific groups remain largely unprotected by legislation, for example, domestic migrant workers (ENR, 2011).

Relatedly, significant changes in labour markets linked to processes of neo-liberalism and the outsourcing of low-skilled work have contributed to increasing the precarity of labour migrants. Often involving a multinational web of contractors and subcontractors, outsourcing has blurred issues of accountability and responsibility for employees (Ruckelshaus et al., Reference Ruckelshaus, Smith, Leberstein and Cho2014). This has contributed to fragmented pay structures, temporary employment and zero hour contracts. Both Bloch and McKay (Reference Bloch and McKay2016) and Lewis et al. (Reference Lewis, Dwyer, Hodkinson and Waite2014) have highlighted the particularly vulnerable position of asylum-seekers and undocumented migrant workers in such conditions. Craig (Reference Craig2015) has found that in many areas of the economy in every EU member state, migrants of all kinds are prone to exploitation, with low wages and poor working conditions. Additionally, in subareas in certain sectors, illegality is the norm, with new and existing migrants more likely to be affected due to their disproportionate presence in such sectors; these migrants are likely to be subjected to very high levels of exploitation as employers take advantage of their vulnerability (Lewis et al., Reference Lewis, Dwyer, Hodkinson and Waite2014)

The lack of transferability of human capital

The challenges that migrants face in transferring human capital to their destination countries have been established in diverse international contexts, including the US (Borjas, Reference Borjas1995), the UK (Bachan and Sheehan, Reference Bachan and Sheehan2010), Canada (Creese and Wiebe, Reference Creese and Wiebe2009) and Norway (Christensen and Guldvik, Reference Christensen and Guldvik2014). Creese and Wiebe (Reference Creese and Wiebe2009) identify a number of structural factors to explain the difficulty which migrants face in transferring their skills, knowledge and experience including labour market shortages in low-paid sectors and economic restructuring. Bachan and Sheehan (Reference Bachan and Sheehan2010) outline factors related to migrant agency, including migrants' willingness to take up work for which they are over-qualified, perhaps due to lack of choice, and their use of recruitment agencies, which may not make efforts to find them jobs that match their qualifications. These factors contribute to the phenomenon of ‘occupational downgrading’ where migrants take up jobs in their destination country which are not commensurate with their educational qualifications and skills (Creese and Wiebe, Reference Creese and Wiebe2009). Although the studies cited here relate to so-called economic migrants, the difficulty that many refugees face in obtaining skilled work which matches their educational background and skills is also well-established (see, for instance, Phillimore and Goodson, Reference Phillimore and Goodson2006).

Discrimination within the workplace

The discrimination experienced by migrants and other ethnic minorities through both formal policies and processes as well as informal practices or cultures is well-established. For instance, in a large and systematic discrimination-testing experiment, Wood et al. (Reference Wood, Hales, Purdon, Sejerson and Hayllar2009) evidenced discriminatory recruitment practices in seven British cities. Qualitative, case-based research continues to uncover manifestations of discriminatory attitudes in informal workplace practices such as racist stereotyping, overt and covert acts of banter, bullying and harassment even among organisations publicly advocating commitment to equal opportunities (Hudson et al., Reference Hudson, Netto, Noon, Sosenko, de Lima and Kamenou-Aigbekaen2013; Ogbonna and Harris, Reference Ogbonna and Harris2006). These phenomena indicate the hegemony that dominant ethnic groups may exert over ethnic minority groups in organisational settings.

Implications of Brexit

The policy implications of Brexit for migrants within the UK labour market – as far as they can be judged within the current political climate – can be considered in terms of the protection of existing migrant workers and their family members; the treatment of asylum-seekers; and future immigration policies and public concerns about immigration.

Protection of existing workers and their families

At the time of writing, the position of EU migrants currently residing in the UK is not known and is likely to take some considerable time to be resolved as part of the negotiations of the country's departure from the EU. It is likely that strong business and moral arguments will be mounted for their continued residence in the country. However, since many of the rights and regulations which currently protect migrant workers’ rights in the labour market in the UK stem from EU law, this is an area which will need continued scrutiny. The UK Prime Minister, Theresa May, has indicated that to ensure a smooth transition when the UK leaves the EU, she will pass a new law that would make all current EU laws binding in the UK, allowing the government to then remove or adapt legislation as it views appropriate. She has also indicated that she will seek to enhance workers’ rights. Consequently, although legislation protecting workers rights, including equality and human rights legislation, which prohibits discriminatory treatment in employment, may initially survive, this could be scrapped in the future. This would increase the current vulnerability of migrant workers to exploitation, and possibly aggravate current levels of hostility towards them.

Also of relevance here are the welfare provisions available to EU migrants and members of their families, which were already substantially reduced in 2014, through a series of measures and have brought about the cumulative impact of increasing their vulnerability to poverty and destitution, including through loss of work (O'Brien, Reference O'Brien2015). While EU migrants are net contributors to the economy, the nature of their low-waged employment which typically involves short-term, casual and agency work indicates that social protection for these individuals needs to extend beyond workers’ rights to include welfare rights, including those of their children. Proposals to further restrict welfare provisions for EU migrants have been mooted, leading O'Brien (Reference O'Brien2015) to question the extent to which the UK is willing to address issues related to social responsibility and justice. This is clearly an area where continued scrutiny is required.

Treatment of asylum-seekers

As a signatory of and ratifier to the 1951 Geneva Convention on the Status of Refugees and the 1967 Protocol, the UK is committed to honouring international commitments, which are not specific to the EU. Individuals fleeing from war and political persecution will continue to have the right to claim asylum in the country and not to be deported before their application is refused and appeal rights are exhausted. However, as Mayblin (Reference Mayblin2016) has pointed out, it is anticipated that on leaving the EU, current obligations to adhere to EU directives of the Common European Asylum System (CEAS), which relate to the reception and treatment of asylum-seekers and refugees, may be diluted. If so, this is likely to increase the vulnerability of asylum-seekers to either destitution or participation in precarious employment, exploitation and forced labour.

Future immigration policies and public concern about immigration

Demand for labour in key sectors of the economy as well as analysis of skills shortages and demographic patterns across the UK should play a significant role in informing future immigration policy. This should take into account regional variations and challenges in the labour market. Given public concerns about levels of immigration, which led to the outcome of the referendum, the development of such policies should allow for the continued communication of factual analysis and engagement with different sectors of the public in order to facilitate informed debate and discussion.

Areas for future research

Continued research attention relating to the position of established migrants and second and third generation migrants and new arrivals is clearly important given current and potential future policy shifts associated with Brexit. Also due to the increasing presence of female migrants in the workforce globally and changes in household dynamics in both sending and receiving countries, it is important to continue to study continuities and discontinuities relating to gendered roles as individuals continue to juggle the balance between workplace and domestic responsibilities. The intersection of other aspects of identities with migrant status is an area that is relatively unexplored, but worthy of further study. It is also important to continue to study the position of asylum-seekers and undocumented migrant workers in order to continue to raise awareness of their specific vulnerabilities to exploitation and forced labour.

From a labour market perspective, there appears to be an unambiguous case to continue to study the role that migrants play in various sectors of the economy at national, regional and local levels and the extent to which their skills are recognised and utilised. This applies not only to short-term effects but also the longer-term effects relating to the integration of migrants and their children over time. Relatedly, from a human rights perspective, it is important to continue to view the extent to which labour markets are regulated in order to protect the rights of vulnerable workers.

It is also important to continue to study and inform the direction of future immigration policy. Research in this area should not only contribute to a reliable and authoritative evidence base on the labour market and examine the extent to which all workers’ rights are protected, but be concerned with exploring how such evidence can be effectively communicated to different sections of the population to counter the perpetuation of myths relating to the impact of migration on the labour market.

References

Anderson, B. and Ruhs, M. (2010) ‘Migrant workers: who needs them? A framework for the analysis of shortages, immigration, and public policy’, in Anderson, B. and Ruhs, M. (eds.), Who Needs Migrant Workers? Labour Shortages, Immigration, and Public Policy, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1552.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anderson, B. and Ruhs, M. (2012) ‘Reliance on migrant labour: inevitability or policy choice?’, Journal of Poverty and Social Justice, 20, 1, 2330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anthias, F. and Yuval-Davis, N. (1992) Racialised Boundaries: Race, Nation, Colour, Class and the Anti-Racist Struggle, London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bachan, R. and Sheehan, M. (2010) ‘On the labour market progress of Polish Accession Workers in South East England’, International Migration, 49, 2, 104–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bakewell, O. (2010) ‘Some reflections on structure and agency in migration theory’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 36, 10, 16891708.Google Scholar
Behtoui, A. (2013) ‘The ethnic penalty: immigration, education and the labour market’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 36, 5, 915–16.Google Scholar
Bell, D. and Elliott, R. (2016) ‘The European referendum – labour markets, migration and benefits’, Enlightening the European Debate, Royal Society of Edinburgh, https://www.rse.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/Paper-4-FINAL-Labour-Markets-Migration-and-Benefits.pdf [accessed 27.04.2017].Google Scholar
Bloch, A. and McKay, S. (2016) Living on the Margins: Undocumented Migrants in a Global City, Bristol: Policy Press.Google Scholar
Borjas, G. (1995) ‘The economic benefits of immigration’, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 9, 2, 322.Google Scholar
Boswell, C. (2008) ‘Combining economics and sociology in migration theory’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 34, 4, 549–66.Google Scholar
Brynin, M. and Güveli, A. (2012) ‘Understanding the ethnic pay gap in Britain’, Work Employment and Society, 26, 4, 574–87.Google Scholar
Christensen, K. and Guldvik, I. (2014) Migrant Care Workers: Searching for New Horizons, Surrey: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Craig, G. (2015) Migration and Integration: A Local and Experiential Perspective, Working Paper 7–2015, Birmingham: IRIS, University of Birmingham.Google Scholar
Craig, G. (forthcoming) ‘The history and pattern of settlement of the UK's Black and minority ethnic population’, in Chattoo, S., Craig, G., Atkin, K. and Flynn, R. (eds.), Understanding ‘Race’ and Ethnicity, Bristol: Policy Press.Google Scholar
Creese, G. and Wiebe, B. (2009) ‘“Survival employment”: gender and deskilling among African immigrants in Canada’, International Migration, 50, 5, 5676.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crenshaw, K. (1989) ‘Demarginalizing the intersection of race and sex: a black feminist critique of anti-discrimination doctrine, feminist theory and anti-racist politics’, The University of Chicago Legal Forum, 139–67.Google Scholar
Donato, K. M., Gabaccia, D., Holdaway, J., Manalansan, M. and Pessar, P. R. (eds.) (2006) ‘Gender and migration revisited: a glass half full in migration studies’, International Migration Review, 40, 1, 323.Google Scholar
Dustmann, C. and Frattini, T. (2013) The Fiscal Effects of Immigration to the UK, Cream Discussion Paper 22/13, London: University College London.Google Scholar
European Commission (2014) Employment and Social Developments in Europe, http://ec.europa.eu/social/main.jsp?catId=738&langId=en&pubId=7684&furtherPubs=yes [accessed 27.04.2017].Google Scholar
European Network on Racism (ENR) (2011) Working on Integration at Local Level, Brussels: European Network on Racism.Google Scholar
Glover, S., Gott, C., Loizillon, A., Portes, J., Price, R., Spender, S., Srinivasan, V. and Willis, C. (2003) Migration: An Economic and Social Analysis, Home Office RDS Occasional paper 67, London.Google Scholar
Greve, B. (2011) ‘Labour migration and labour market integration: causes and challenges’, in Carmel, E., Cerami, A. and Papadopoulos, T. (eds.), Migration and Welfare in the New Europe, Bristol: Policy Press.Google Scholar
Heath, A. and McMahon, D. (1995) ‘Education and occupational attainments: the impact of ethnic origins’, Paper 34, Centre for Research into Elections and Social Trends.Google Scholar
Hoang, L. A. (2011) ‘Gender identity and agency in migration decision-making: evidence from Vietnam’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 37, 9, 1441–57.Google Scholar
Hudson, M., Netto, G., Noon, M., Sosenko, F., de Lima, P. and Kamenou-Aigbekaen, N. (2013) In Work Poverty, Ethnicity and Workplace Cultures, York: Joseph Rowntree Foundation.Google Scholar
Hudson, M., Netto, G., Noon, M., Sosenko, F., de Lima, P. and Kamenou-Aigbekaen, N. (2017) ‘Ethnicity and low wage traps: favouritism, homosocial reproduction and economic marginalization’, Work, Employment and Society, 1 January 2017, http://doi.org/10.1177/0950017016674898.Google Scholar
IoM (2010) World Migration Report: The Future of Integration Policy, Background Paper, Paris, International Organisation for Migration.Google Scholar
Kamenou, N., Netto, G. and Fearful, A. (2012) ‘Ethnic minority women in the Scottish labour market’, British Journal of Management, 24, 3, 398413.Google Scholar
Kenny, E. J. and Briner, R. (2013) ‘Increases in salience of ethnic identity at work: the roles of ethnic assignation and ethnic identification’, Human Relations, 66, 5, 725–48.Google Scholar
Kofman, E. (2004) ‘Gendered global migrations: diversity and stratification’, International Feminist Journal of Politics, 6, 4, 642–64.Google Scholar
Kurekova, L. (2011) ‘Theories of migration: conceptual review and empirical testing in the context of the EU East–West flows’, Paper prepared for the Interdisciplinary conference on Migration, Economic Change, Social Challenge, 6–9 April, University College London.Google Scholar
Lewis, H., Dwyer, P., Hodkinson, S. and Waite, L. (2014) Precarious Lives: Forced Labour, Exploitation and Asylum, Bristol: Policy Press.Google Scholar
Low Pay Commission (2013) National Minimum Wage: Low Pay Commission Report 2013, Cm 8565, London: The Stationery Office https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/226822/National_minimum_wage_Low_Pay_Commission_report_2013.pdf [accessed 27.04.2017].Google Scholar
Lucchino, P., Rosazza-Bondibene, C. and Portes, J. (2012) Examining the Relationship between Immigration and Unemployment using National Insurance Registration Data, London: National Institute for Economic and Social Research.Google Scholar
Lutz, H. (2010) ‘Gender in the migratory process’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 36, 10, 1647–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mayblin, L. (2016) ‘What will Brexit mean for asylum in Britain?’, Open Democracy, https://www.opendemocracy.net/lucy-mayblin/what-will-brexit-mean-for-asylum-in-uk [accessed 21.04.2017].Google Scholar
McBride, G., Hebson, G. and Holgate, J. (2015) ‘Intersectionality: are we taking enough notice in the field of work and employment relations?’, Work, Employment and Society, 29, 2, 331–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Modood, T. (1997) ‘Employment’, in Modood, T., Berthoud, R., Lakey, J., Nazroo, J., Smith, P., Virdee, S. and Beishon, S. (eds.), Ethnic Minorities in Britain, London: Policy Studies Institute.Google Scholar
Mooney, S. (2016) ‘Nimble’ intersectionality in employment research: a way to resolve methodological dilemmas’, Work, Employment and Society, 30, 4, 708–18.Google Scholar
Mushaben, J. (2009) ‘Up and down the stair-case: redefining gender identities through migration and ethnic employment in Germany’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 35, 8, 1249–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Netto, G., Hudson, M., Noon, M., Sosenko, F., de Lima, P. and Kamenou-Aigbekaen, N. (2015) ‘Migration, ethnicity and progression from low-skilled work’, Social Policy and Society, 14, 4, 509–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O'Brien, C. (2015) ‘The pillory, the precipice and the slippery slope: the profound effects of the UK's legal reform programme targeting EU migrants’, Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law, 37, 1, 111–36.Google Scholar
Ogbonna, E. and Harris, L. C. (2006) ‘The dynamics of employee relationships in an ethnically diverse workforce’, Human Relations, 59, 3, 379407.Google Scholar
Phillimore, J. and Goodson, L. (2006) ‘Problem or opportunity? Asylum-seekers, refugees, employment and social exclusion in deprived areas’, Urban Studies, 43, 10, 1715–36.Google Scholar
Ruckelshaus, C., Smith, R., Leberstein, S. and Cho, E. (2014) ‘Who's the boss: restoring accountability for labour standards in outsourced work’, http://www.nelp.org/content/uploads/2015/02/Whos-the-Boss-Restoring-Accountability-Labor-Standards-Outsourced-Work-Report.pdf [accessed 27.04.2017].Google Scholar
Salway, S. M. (2007) ‘Economic activity among UK Bangladeshi and Pakistani women in the 1990s: evidence for continuity or change in the family resources survey’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 33, 5, 825–47.Google Scholar
Salway, S. (2008) ‘Labour market experiences of young UK Bangladeshi men’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 31, 6, 1126–52.Google Scholar
Somerville, W. and Sumption, M. (2008) Immigration and the Labour Market, London: Migration Policy Institute/EHRC.Google Scholar
Virdee, S. (2006) ‘“Race”, employment and social change: a critique of current orthodoxies’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 29, 4, 605–28.Google Scholar
Wood, M., Hales, J., Purdon, S., Sejerson, T. and Hayllar, O. (2009) A Test for Racial Discrimination in Recruitment Practice in British Cities, London: Department for Work and Pensions.Google Scholar