Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-j824f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T11:59:28.577Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Conceptualising the Role of Deservingness in Migrants’ Access to Social Services

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 April 2021

Nora Ratzmann
Affiliation:
Centre for the Analysis of Social Exclusion, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK E-mail: n.ratzmann@lse.ac.uk
Nina Sahraoui
Affiliation:
Center for Sociological and Political Research in Paris (CRESPPA, CNRS UMR 7217), France E-mail: nina.sahraoui@cnrs.fr
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

This ‘state-of-the art’ article on the role of deservingness in governing migrants’ access to social services situates our themed section’s contribution to the literature at the intersection between the study of street-level bureaucracy and practices of internal bordering through social policy. Considering the increasing relevance of migration control post-entry, we review the considerations that guide the local delivery of social services. Among others, moral ideas about a claimant’s worthiness to receive social benefits and services guide policy implementation. But while ideas of deservingness help to understand how perceptions of migrants’ claiming play out in practice, we observe limited use of the concept in street-level bureaucracy research. Drawing on theorisations from welfare attitudinal research, we demonstrate the salience of deservingness attitudes in understanding the dynamics of local social service delivery to migrant clients.

Type
Themed Section: The (Un)deserving Migrant? Street-Level Bordering Practices and Deservingness in Access to Social Services
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

Introduction

Social policy has increasingly become a tool for governing migration internally, beyond state borders (Ataç and Rosenberger, Reference Ataç and Rosenberger2018). This state-of-the-art article situates the distinct contribution of our themed section to the study of migrants’ access to key services such as healthcare, housing and labour market integration (see Introduction) at the intersection of welfare policy implementation and internal bordering. We review both strands of literature, as they form the scholarly background to understanding migrants’ street-level access to essential social services against the background of a multiplication of internal migration control strategies.

Within this themed section, we use the term ‘migrant’ to designate foreign nationals residing outside of their home country, who we see as a distinct social group in service provision. This umbrella term encompasses different policy categories and legal statuses (e.g. asylum seekers, refugees, specific national groups etc.). We include the experiences of both third-country nationals and mobile intra-EU migrant citizens who live in a member state other than their own. As de jure eligibility does not necessarily map onto de facto access to social services, the themed section examines migrants’ lived experiences of claiming and accessing such services in practice, rather than on the policies and legal entitlements themselves.

Considering our interest in social provision as a site of internal bordering, we define internal bordering as processes that restrict migrants’ ability to satisfy their basic needs through limited access to essential social services. The concept of internal bordering generally captures the many ways in which migrants’ meaningful participation in society is enabled or hampered by the combined effects of measures that control migration post-entry. The empirical evidence put forward by Yuval-Davis and colleagues (Reference Yuval-Davis, Wemyss and Cassidy2019) on the growing prevalence of everyday bordering calls for further examination of service provider-migrant relations, as regards both their moral underpinnings and their social implications. At the same time, recent welfare scholarship around deservingness indicates a need to explore this notion qualitatively (Laenen and van Oorschot, Reference Laenen and van Oorschot2019). Seeking to contribute to both these perspectives, we contend that the criteria that determine access to key social services reveal what values and norms underpin not only who is deemed deserving of welfare support but also who is believed to belong. Thus, the aim of this themed section is to unearth findings into identity-based deservingness perceptions when it comes to social service delivery to non-citizens, which has remained a neglected aspect in most street-level studies on social policy.

Focussing on the policy practice, we also contribute to debates on the local welfare state and the subsidiarisation of social policies, taking account of the multiplication of actors involved in designing, managing and implementing such policies (Kazepov, Reference Kazepov2008). The street-level bureaucracy literature, as summarised in its key tenets in this article, provides the conceptual backdrop for analysing the dynamics of local policy implementation. The articles of the themed section explore the determinants of migrants’ access to social services in practice by devoting particular attention to the notion of deservingness, as moral judgements play an important role in street-level bureaucrats’ use of discretion (see Introduction). Our approach taken in this collection of articles allows us to uncover how administrators in diverse social policy fields indirectly select and regulate who is (not) welcome to settle across different European countries, depending on whether those migrants are seen as ‘deserving’ to be ‘here’. To that end, this state-of-the-art article first reviews the literature on internal bordering.

Bordering beyond borders: migration control through social policies

The process of ‘bordering’ beyond borders is relevant for understanding the many ways in which migrants are neither fully included in nor entirely excluded from social and civic participation in their host society. Migration scholars have recently put forward the idea that the more migration is surveilled and policed, the more borders penetrate the social fabric of societies, beyond actual border sites. De Genova observes that ‘the entirety of the interior of the space of the state becomes a regulatory zone of immigration enforcement’, which means that not only is the border everywhere but ‘so also is the spectacle of its enforcement’ (Reference De Genova2013: 1183). It is no coincidence that major scholarly contributions on this theme were put forward by researchers in the UK, where since 2014 the Home Office has implemented an official ‘hostile environment’ policy. This policy aims at turning professionals and citizens into informal border guards, in order to make undocumented persons’ lives as difficult as possible by impeding their efforts to find work, obtain accommodation or access healthcare (Yuval-Davis et al., Reference Yuval-Davis, Wemyss and Cassidy2019). The notion of bordering thus captures the processual dimension of borders, ‘as something that reaches beyond borderlines and into everyday life’ (Tervonen et al., Reference Tervonen, Pellander and Yuval-Davis2018: 139).

The ways in which different categories of migrants are simultaneously included and excluded, through both policies and street-level practices of implementation thereof, are key to capturing the extent of internal bordering. The concept of differential inclusion by Mezzadra and Neilson foregrounds ‘how inclusion in a sphere or realm can be subject to varying degrees of subordination, rule, discrimination and segmentation’ (Mezzadra and Neilson, Reference Mezzadra and Neilson2012: 67). Their approach allows for capturing the intertwined phenomena of a proliferation and a heterogenisation of borders that take place through processes of filtering and selecting (Mezzadra and Neilson, Reference Mezzadra and Neilson2013: 3), of both third-country nationals and mobile intra-EU migrant citizens (Lafleur and Mescoli, Reference Lafleur and Mescoli2018).

Cassidy and colleagues further define bordering as ‘practices that are situated and constituted in the specificity of political negotiations as well as the everyday life performance of them, being shifting and contested between individuals and groupings as well as in the constructions of individual subjectivities’ (Reference Cassidy, Yuval-Davis and Wemyss2018: 139). These authors adopt a situated and intersectional approach to bordering that emphasises the analytical relevance of the mutual constitution of different social divisions, which remain, however, ontologically ‘irreducible to one another’ (Yuval-Davis et al., Reference Yuval-Davis, Wemyss and Cassidy2019: 26). Thus, not only class, gender and racialisation, but additional determinants of social positions such as nationality, migration status and age are key to grasping the articulation of many layers of crisscrossing bordering processes. Migrants are in this regard uniquely positioned to reveal deeply entrenched social divisions that cut across the social fabric of society.

Processes of internal bordering also constitute concrete practices of differentiation between ‘us’ and ‘them’ (Anderson, Reference Anderson2013). In their theorisation of everyday bordering, Yuval-Davis and colleagues insist that ‘the increasing incorporation of technologies of everyday bordering into UK immigration legislation’ has social and political implications ‘not only for irregular migrants but for all UK citizens and residents’ (2018: 229). Similarly, Anderson (Reference Anderson2013) argued in her book Us and Them that the multiple internal borders, administrative and social, that migrants are confronted with, are by no means an experience reserved for non-citizens. Rather, differently positioned groups of migrants (skilled or ‘unskilled’ workers, asylum seekers, refugees, migrant spouses, etc.) access distinct sets of rights and varied degrees of social coverage, mirroring hierarchies of values attached to conditional social citizenship rights that also affect national citizens (Shutes, Reference Shutes, Anderson and Hughes2015). While migrants are particularly exposed to such restrictions, patterns of exclusion (or differential inclusion in Mezzadra and Neilson’s terms) follow intersectional lines of division, including gender. Thus, unpacking perceptions of undeservingness, as forms of ‘othering’ and boundary-making (Lamont and Molnár, Reference Lamont and Molnár2002; Lamont, Reference Lamont2014) offers insights into ideas about ‘us’, of what constitutes a valuable citizen (Shutes, Reference Shutes2016; Dean, Reference Dean, Seubert, Eberl and van Waarden2018), and what sorts of values and norms underpin such understandings.

Considering our focus on administrative practices of inclusion and exclusion, the following section approaches the question of bordering through social provision by reviewing existing literature on policy implementation. Drawing on conceptual and empirical studies of street-level bureaucracy, we summarise the sorts of considerations which guide policy practice at the local level.

Understanding the street-level implementation of social and immigration policies

The street-level bureaucracy literature provides the conceptual backdrop for analysing the dynamics of local policy practice in social service delivery. Lipsky (Reference Lipsky and Covello1980) pioneered this ever-growing body of literature. Street-level organisations can be defined as ‘those agencies and governmental departments that directly deliver policy to people’, as representatives of the state (Brodkin, Reference Brodkin, Brodkin and Marston2013: 18). Provision of social services constitutes a typical case of street-level work, whereby frontline bureaucrats supply claimants with often essential services which cannot be obtained elsewhere. Within this unequal power setting, street-level bureaucrats assign individual cases into broader ‘categories of action’. Lipsky (Reference Lipsky and Covello1980) extensively analysed the simplifying routines used to deal with the pressure of policy implementation. These include people-processing techniques to manipulate caseloads, such as rationing and parking on waiting lists, rule adaptation, withholding of information, or creative rule interpretation for circumstances that had not been foreseen when devising the policy. However, such coping strategies to resist managerial pressure can bring about adverse effects, such as turning away claimants in need.

Part of the street-level bureaucracy literature on social benefit and service provision focusses on the institutional and organisational constraints which shape local policy implementation. Authors have examined the challenges accompanying the economisation of social administrations when New Public Management principles were introduced into social security provision (Heidenreich and Rice, Reference Heidenreich, Rice, Heidenreich and Rice2016). Such private sector-style management practices include explicit performance measurement standards, quantitative efficiency and output controls, organisational disaggregation and devolution, competitive tendering or contractualisation. For instance, Brodkin (Reference Brodkin, Brodkin and Marston2013) showed how marketisation practices tend to reduce discretionary powers and lead to displacement effects, as caseworkers focus their attention on what is measured and valued, such as placing recipients quickly in any kind of job, rather than responding to their clients’ needs.

While a substantial number of the street-level studies have explored the administrative constraints of policy implementation, other accounts break with the paradigm of the quasi-mechanical encounter between an impersonal bureaucrat and the standardised claimant (Dubois, Reference Dubois2010). Scholars started conceptualising street-level exchanges as part of the broader political dynamics of status re-construction (Brodkin, Reference Brodkin, Hupe, Hill and Buffat2015). This stream of research understands implementation work as a complex, multi-level negotiation process between two individuals with their own, unique backgrounds and experiences. Studies have analysed the role of professional identity in service delivery (Watkins-Hayes, Reference Watkins-Hayes2009), including personal work ethics (Evans, Reference Evans2014) or the impact of policy alienation (Tummers, Reference Tummers2012). Van der Leun (Reference Van der Leun2003) demonstrated that the higher the level of professionalisation, the stronger the resistance of professional officers to restrictive policies. Others focussed on administrators’ value judgements regarding claimants’ circumstances. Maynard-Moody and Musheno (Reference Maynard-Moody and Musheno2003), in an in-depth study of US police, teaching and social administration, developed the so-called citizen-agent narrative. They contrast the latter with Lipsky’s (Reference Lipsky and Covello1980) state-agent narrative. Instead of work pressure and routines shaping decisions, they argued that bureaucrats follow rules or bend them based on the claimants’ apparent deservingness of state support, or lack thereof. This stream of literature highlights how local bureaucrats are far more than mere technocratic implementers of law and policy. Administrators are conceptualised as co-producers of normative value systems regarding the legitimacy of a claim made.

Considering our focus on non-nationals, studies on immigration policy practice offer further insights into potential implementation dynamics. This body of literature similarly underscores the role of both structural demands of the institutional set-up, and personal value judgements shaping administrators’ implementation behaviour. For instance, the contributions of Cyrus and Vogel (Reference Cyrus and Vogel2003) and Eule (Reference Eule2014) on Germany, Miaz (Reference Miaz2015) on Switzerland, Sales and Hek (Reference Sales, Hek, Hayes, Humphries and Brown2004) on the UK or Tuckett (Reference Tuckett2015) on Italy relate gatekeeping practices to the street-level pressures of scarce resources, high caseloads, insufficient training and the piecemeal nature of the law itself. In similar vein, the special issue by Borrelli and Andreetta (Reference Borrelli and Andreetta2019) examined the role of paperwork, foregrounding the ambiguous role of documents. The latter allegedly ensure accountability yet in practice facilitate the state’s coercive practices of detention and deportation. Ellermann’s (2015) and Gravelle et al.’s (Reference Gravelle, Ellermann, Dauvergne, Anderson, Gibney and Paoletti2013) findings on German deportation policy problematised the tensions between national legislative mandates and local implementation pressure to explain the apparently arbitrary implementation processes. Infantino (Reference Infantino2016) in the case of Belgium, and Dörrenbächer (Reference Dörrenbächer2017) in the Netherlands, also considered the role of the European framework, which commonly serves as a decision-making guideline when national legislation remains ambiguous.

Other scholars focussed on administrators’ identities, which intervene with the institutional pressure of policy implementation. Alpes and Spire (Reference Alpes and Spire2014) in France and Triandafyllidou (Reference Triandafyllidou2003) in Italy explained inconsistent decision-making, in the form of case prioritisation and discrimination, as stemming from the administrators’ ambition to protect cultural homogeneity and socio-economic and political state interests. The authors showed how local administrators can be implicated in creating hidden borders to territorial access, based on whom they consider to belong. Similarly, Satzewich (Reference Satzewich2015), in his study of visa officers in Canada, demonstrated how they systematically disfavoured non-Western applicants. Those administrators often evaluated clients’ moral worthiness based on their national origin and apparent social class.

Insights from immigration policy implementation research thus point us towards the role of ideas about identity and belonging when local bureaucrats deliver services to migrant clients. Bridging our interest in migrants as a distinct social group and in social provision as a site of internal bordering, the following part reviews the strand of literature that focusses on migrants’ experiences of accessing social services, to reveal potential parallels to bordering practices relied on in immigration policy implementation.

Street-level bureaucrats’ interactions with migrant claimants in welfare provision

Similar to Maynard-Moody and Musheno (Reference Maynard-Moody and Musheno2012), we believe that migration calls for investigation of how street-level bureaucrats treat non-citizens, especially in social service delivery beyond social benefit receipt. As summarised below, a range of factors influence street-level bureaucrats’ behaviour towards non-national claimants, including claimants’ legal residency status, caseworkers’ demographic characteristics, institutional implementation constraints and individual ideas about belonging and migrant claimants’ moral worthiness to obtain social benefits and services in their host country.

The welfare state literature has examined the specific location of immigrants within welfare state provision, foregrounding the conditionality of social entitlements upon employment and legal status (Sainsbury, Reference Sainsbury2012; Corrigan, Reference Corrigan2014). Hierarchies of migrants’ administrative statuses matter as they not only determine migrants’ legal entitlement but produce differentiated access to the welfare system for different categories of migrants in practice (Shutes, Reference Shutes2016; Könönen, Reference Könönen2018). It appears that restricting migrants’ social rights has become an instrument of migration management per se whereby increasing conditionality is meant to deter migration (Bommes and Geddes, Reference Bommes and Geddes2000; Ataç and Rosenberger, Reference Ataç and Rosenberger2018).

While most scholarship on the impact of migrant status on social entitlements has examined the stratification in access through the legislative framework, less attention has been paid to the gap between legally granted rights and actual benefit and service receipt for migrant claimants. Though some insights can be drawn from the representative bureaucracy literature. The latter offers an account of how similarities or differences in age, gender, ethnicity or class play out in the evaluation of claims in practice. Such quantitative studies on the impact of administrators’ own demographics in discretionary decisions on social benefit receipt argue that shared characteristics serve as cognitive frames during claims processing (see Fording et al., Reference Fording, Soss and Schram2007; Monnat, Reference Monnat2010; Soss et al., Reference Soss, Fording and Schram2011). Watkins-Hayes (Reference Watkins-Hayes2009) thus concludes that the display of a common background can be enacted purposefully in claims-processing to enable or block benefit access in practice.

Other studies on the impact of migrant status, ethnicity and race on policy implementation devote themselves to disentangling the complexity of migrant disadvantage when claiming social benefits in practice. For example, Hemker and Rink’s (Reference Hemker and Rink2017) experimental vignette study of bureaucratically embedded discrimination in German welfare offices finds substantive disadvantage experienced by non-German claimants regarding the quality of services they receive. Seeking explanations, authors either champion institutional variables or delve into the role of moral judgements. For instance, de Wilde (Reference De Wilde, Van Oorschot, Roosma, Meuleman and Reeskens2017) illustrated via a factorial survey analysis that immigrants are not per se more discriminated against than native claimants in Belgium, concluding that ideas about identity did not prove to be significant. Eliassi’s (Reference Eliassi2014) qualitative interview study in Sweden, on the other hand, pointed to structural inequalities experienced by Muslim claimants, whom street-level bureaucrats portrayed as judged to be illegitimate receivers of welfare benefits based on their perceptions of behavioural non-compliance. Similarly focussing on structural disadvantage, Holzinger (Reference Holzinger2019) analysed practices of language-based discrimination, showing how Hungarian claimants with limited knowledge of the German language came to be barred from access to Austrian social security benefits and associated labour market integration services.

Dwyer et al.’s (Reference Dwyer, Scullion, Jones and Stewart2019) work on welfare conditionality in the UK spotlighted institutional explanations, demonstrating how differential rules determining eligibility, language difficulties, and migrants’ understandings of their entitlements can play into discriminatory practices in the case of EU migrant claimants. Price and Spencer’s (Reference Price and Spencer2014) study of the conditional minimum income schemes in Berlin and Madrid equally highlighted the role of organisational constraints, such as limited budgets, the complexity of laws and policy frameworks, and the lack of inter-cultural awareness among administrators, which led to excessive gatekeeping of social assistance benefits for mobile EU citizens and asylum-seekers of several African nationalities.

While said studies highlight the role of institutional frameworks and identity in street-level implementation work, the role of administrators’ moral perceptions on extending welfare services to non-nationals have remained understudied. Research mostly engaged with the broad notion of deservingness, not distinguishing between claimant groups of varying origin. However, as Kootstra (Reference Kootstra2016) pointed out in a vignette experiment studying public deservingness attitudes towards the unemployed in the Netherlands and the UK more broadly, majority population respondents distinguished between migrant and non-migrant claimants. Respondents tended to apply a double standard to welfare claimants from an ethnic minority background, punishing them more severely for ‘unfavourable’ behaviour (e.g. a short work history) than native-born claimants.

Thus far, only very few studies disentangle the different inputs which impact street-level bureaucrats’ ideas about migrants’ worthiness to receive social benefits and services more systematically. Along with the contributions in this themed section, Carmel and Sojka’s (Reference Carmel and Sojka2020) work on the role of deservingness and belonging in impacting access to social provision is uniquely positioned in this regard. The authors’ findings on deservingness in relation to migrants highlight the complex, overlapping and competing rationales the different policy levels mobilise to justify practices of inclusion and exclusion into benefit receipt of intra-EU migrants residing in a member state other than their own. Carmel and Sojka show how ideas about a claimant’s worthiness become based upon several criteria, including need, membership and identity, control over one’s socio-economic situation or reciprocity. As a final piece of the puzzle to help in understanding migrants’ social service access in practice, the following section therefore examines how the complex notion of deservingness has been theorised in welfare state and healthcare research.

Deservingness literature and local policy implementation dynamics

The concept of deservingness was academically popularised by survey-based research on general welfare attitudes, in an attempt to explicate the conditions under which and the people with whom citizens are prepared to share access to public welfare resources (Van Oorschot, Reference Van Oorschot2000; Mewes and Mau, Reference Mewes, Mau and Svallfors2012; Svallfors et al., Reference Svallfors, Kulin, Schnabel and Svallfors2012; Reeskens and van der Meer, Reference Reeskens and van der Meer2015; Kootstra, Reference Kootstra2016). While this theoretical approach, developed from a public opinion survey, applies to public welfare attitudes more generally, we consider it a useful tool for understanding street-level bureaucrats’ moral considerations when deciding on access to benefits and services for migrant clients. However, we noted the limited use of the concept within studies of social policy implementation, particularly regarding non-national, migrant recipients.

In more detail, the CARIN framework (Control, Attitude, Reciprocity, Identity and Need) by Van Oorschot and colleagues (Van Oorschot, Reference Van Oorschot2008; Van Oorschot et al., Reference Van Oorschot, Roosma, Meuleman and Reeskens2017) was the first to systematically theorise, on the basis of quantitative research, common criteria upon which the social legitimacy of access to social benefits is evaluated. Van Oorschot deduced the following five central criteria that the general public use to assess an individual’s or a group’s deservingness of accessing welfare benefits:

  1. 1. control: the less control, the more deserving;

  2. 2. need: the greater the level of need, the more deserving;

  3. 3. identity: the closer to ‘us’, the more deserving;

  4. 4. attitude: the more compliant, the more deserving;

  5. 5. reciprocity: the more reciprocation, the more deserving (2000: 36).

About two decades after first sketching this framework, Van Oorschot and colleagues emphasised the need for a qualitative research approach into the formation of deservingness judgements, in order to go beyond deductive frames of analysis, stating: ‘We cannot, on the basis of earlier work on welfare deservingness, say with any certainty that ordinary people actually apply the five – and only those five – deservingness criteria identified in the CARIN-model’ (Laenen and van Oorschot, Reference Laenen and van Oorschot2019: 10). Although the CARIN criteria attracted some attention by scholars using qualitative methods, existing qualitative studies into how deservingness plays out in service delivery mostly engage with policy-makers’ perceptions of deservingness (Chauvin and Garcés-Mascareñas, Reference Chauvin and Garcés-Mascareñas2014; Spencer, Reference Spencer2016; Ataç, Reference Ataç2019; Spencer and Delvino, Reference Spencer and Delvino2019). For instance, Spencer (Reference Spencer2016) foregrounds that negative judgements attached to irregularity are countered by a recognition of undocumented children’s lack of control over their situation, leading to more favourable views in terms of children’s deservingness. Ataç (Reference Ataç2019) emphasises, in parallel to the CARIN criteria, the specific relevance of vulnerability and performance within deservingness judgements on rejected asylum seekers’ access to state-provided accommodation. The study of dominant framings for policy implementation from the perspective of deservingness uncovers the contradictions that institutional settings produce. Chauvin and Garcés-Mascareñas (Reference Chauvin and Garcés-Mascareñas2014: 427–428), for instance, identified a tension, or in their terms, a ‘frame discrepancy’, between vulnerability and performance-based frames, that suppose simultaneously the victim’s passivity and the citizen’s agency, for undocumented migrants seeking regularisation.

Another stream of research that is particularly helpful in thinking about what ideas about deservingness may entail emerged around the notion of health-related deservingness as applied to migrant patients. This qualitative approach helps in conceptualising the notion of deservingness by pointing to additional elements, specific to migrants’ deservingness, that are not foregrounded by the CARIN-frame. An important contribution of this approach to deservingness is its emphasis on relationality and contingency, which is certainly owed to its theorisation being rooted in ethnographic research (Willen, Reference Willen2012). As Willen and Cook insist: ‘deservingness’ is ‘reckoned in ways that are relational, conditional, context-dependent, syncretic, affect-laden, and mutable’ (Reference Willen, Cook and Thomas2016: 113−14; see also Malakasis and Sahraoui, Reference Malakasis, Sahraoui and Sahraoui2020 for a gendered analysis).

Considering street-level staff’s complicit or subversive political role in policy-making (Brodkin, Reference Brodkin, Brodkin and Marston2013), there is a need to carefully study their use of discretion when it comes to granting access to social services to non-national claimants. We can conclude from our review that the study of street-level interactions with migrant recipients in welfare provision represents a growing field of enquiry. However, except for health, the connection between perceived deservingness and ascribed membership of a pre-defined community of recipients has remained underexplored in qualitative social policy implementation research.

As a contribution to the aforementioned debate, this themed section thus connects the analysis of non-conventional bordering practices at the front-line (Eule, Reference Eule2014) to a critical examination of the figure of the undeserving migrant (Anderson, Reference Anderson2013; Bonjour and Duyvendak, Reference Bonjour and Duyvendak2017). We outlined in our Introduction how this themed section advances our understanding of internal bordering practices based on ideas of deservingness when it comes to migrant recipients. The following case studies explore how such understandings of deservingness impact the rationing of public services to migrant clients in the particular country case and area of social service delivery chosen by our contributors.

Acknowledgements

We are indebted to the Collège d’études mondiales, Paris, for their invaluable financial and logistical support, without which this themed section would not have been possible. We would also like to extend special thanks to the participants of our workshop ‘The (un)deserving migrant?’ at Fondation Maison des sciences de l’homme in Paris in 2019.

References

Alpes, M. J. and Spire, A. (2014) ‘Dealing with law in migration control. The powers of street-level bureaucrats at French consulates’, Social and Legal Studies, 23, 2, 261–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anderson, B. (2013) Us and Them? The Dangerous Politics of Immigration Control, Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ataç, I. (2019) ‘Deserving shelter: conditional access to accommodation for rejected asylum seekers in Austria, the Netherlands, and Sweden’, Journal of Immigrant and Refugee Studies, 17, 1, 4460.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ataç, I. and Rosenberger, S. (2018) ‘Social policies as a tool of migration control’, Journal of Immigrant and Refugee Studies, 17, 1, 110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bommes, M. and Geddes, A. (eds.) (2000) Immigration and Welfare. Challenging the Borders of the Welfare State, London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bonjour, S. and Duyvendak, J. W. (2017) ‘The ‘migrant with poor prospects’. Racialized intersections of class and culture in Dutch civic integration debates’, Ethnic and Racial Studies 42, 1, 119.Google Scholar
Borrelli, L. M. and Andreetta, S. (2019) ‘Introduction. Governing migration through paperwork’, Journal of Legal Anthropology, 3, 2, Winter, 19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brodkin, E. Z. (2013) ‘Street-level organisations and the welfare state’, in Brodkin, E. Z. and Marston, G. (eds.), Work and the Welfare State. Street-Level Organizations and Workfare Politics, Washington D.C.: Georgetown University Press (Public management and change series), 1734.Google Scholar
Brodkin, E. Z. (2015) ‘The inside story. Street-level research in the US and beyond’, in Hupe, P., Hill, M. and Buffat, A. (eds.), Understanding Street-Level Bureaucrats, Bristol: Policy Press, 2542.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carmel, E. and Sojka, B. (2020) ‘Beyond welfare chauvinism and deservingness. Rationales of belonging as a conceptual framework for the politics and governance of migrants’ rights’, Journal of Social Policy, 123, doi: 10.1017/S0047279420000379.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cassidy, K., Yuval-Davis, N. and Wemyss, G. (2018) ‘Intersectional border(ing)s’, Political Geography, 66, 139–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chauvin, S. and Garcés-Mascareñas, B. (2014) ‘Becoming less illegal: deservingness frames and undocumented migrant incorporation’, Sociology Compass, 8, 4, 422–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corrigan, O. (2014) ‘Migrant deprivation, conditionality of legal status and the welfare state’, Journal of European Social Policy, 24, 3, 223–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cyrus, N. and Vogel, D. (2003) ‘Work-permit decisions in the German labour administration. An exploration of the implementation process’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 29, 2, 225–55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dean, H. (2018) ‘EU Citizenship and ‘Work’: tensions between formal and substantive equality’, in Seubert, S., Eberl, O. and van Waarden, F. (eds.), Reconsidering EU Citizenship. Contradictions and Constraints, [S.l.], Edward Elgar Publishing, Chapter 5.Google Scholar
De Genova, N. (2013) ‘Spectacles of migrant ‘illegality’: the scene of exclusion, the obscene of inclusion’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 36, 7, 1180–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Wilde, M. (2017) ‘Deservingness in social assistance administrative practice: a factorial survey approach’, in Van Oorschot, W., Roosma, F., Meuleman, B. and Reeskens, T. (eds.), The Social Legitimacy of Targeted Welfare: Attitudes to Welfare Deservingness, Cheltenham & Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, 225–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dörrenbächer, N. (2017) ‘Europe at the frontline. Analysing street-level motivations for the use of European Union migration law’, Journal of European Public Policy, 24, 9, 1328–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dubois, V. (2010) The Bureaucrat and the Poor. Encounters in French Welfare Offices, Burlington, VT: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Dwyer, P. J., Scullion, L., Jones, K. and Stewart, A. (2019) ‘The impact of conditionality on the welfare rights of EU migrants in the UK’, Policy and Politics 47, 1, 133–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eliassi, B. (2014) ‘Constructing cultural Otherness within the Swedish welfare state. The cases of social workers in Sweden’, Qualitative Social Work, 4, 4, 554–71.Google Scholar
Ellermann, A. (2015) ‘Do policy legacies matter? Past and present guest worker recruitment in Germany’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 41, 8, 1235–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eule, T. G. (2014) Inside Immigration Law. Migration Management and Policy Application in Germany, Farnham: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Evans, T. (2014) ‘The moral economy of practice of street-level policy work’, Croatian and Comparative Public Administration, 14, 2, 381–99.Google Scholar
Fording, R. C., Soss, J. and Schram, S. F. (2007) ‘Devolution, discretion, and the effect of local political values on TANF sanctioning’, Social Service Review, 81, 2, 285316.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gravelle, M., Ellermann, A. and Dauvergne, C. (2013) ‘Studying migration governance from the bottom-up’, in Anderson, B., Gibney, M. J. and Paoletti, E. (eds.), The Social, Political and Historical Contours of Deportation, New York, NY: Springer New York, 5977.Google Scholar
Heidenreich, M. and Rice, D. (2016) ‘Integrating social and employment policies at the local level: conceptual and empirical challenges’, in Heidenreich, M. and Rice, D. (eds.), Integrating Social and Employment Policies in Europe. Active Inclusion and Challenges for Local Welfare Governance, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing, 1650.Google Scholar
Hemker, J. and Rink, A. (2017) ‘Multiple dimensions of bureaucratic discrimination. Evidence from German welfare offices’, American Journal of Political Science, 61, 4, 786803.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holzinger, C. (2019): ‘We don’t worry that much about language’: street-level bureaucracy in the context of linguistic diversity’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 46, 9, 1792–808.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Infantino, F. (2016) ‘State-bound visa policies and Europeanised practices. Comparing EU visa policy implementation in Morocco’, Journal of Borderlands Studies, 2,116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kazepov, Y. (2008) ‘The subsidiarization of social policies. Actors, processes and impacts’, European Societies, 10, 2, 247–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Könönen, J. (2018) ‘Differential inclusion of non-citizens in a universalistic welfare state’, Citizenship Studies, 22,1, 5369.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kootstra, A. (2016) ‘Deserving and undeserving welfare claimants in Britain and the Netherlands. Examining the role of ethnicity and migration status using a vignette experiment’, European Social Review, 32, 3, 325–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Laenen, R. and van Oorschot, W. (2019) ‘Why deservingness theory needs qualitative research. Comparing focus group discussions on social welfare in three welfare regimes’, SPSW Working Paper No. CeSo/SPSW/2019-01, Leuven: Centre for Sociological Research, KU Leuven.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lafleur, J.-M. and Mescoli, E. (2018) ‘Creating undocumented EU migrants through welfare: a conceptualization of undeserving and precarious citizenship’, Sociology, 52, 3, 480–96.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lamont, M. (2014) ‘Reflections inspired by ethnic boundary making. Institutions, power, networks by Andreas Wimmer’, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 37, 5, 814–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lamont, M. and Molnár, V. (2002) ‘The Study of boundaries in the social sciences’, Annuelle Revue Socioloque, 28, 1, 167–95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lipsky, M. (1980) ‘Poverty and administration. Perspectives on research’, in Covello, V. T. (ed.), Poverty and Public Policy. An Evaluation of Social Science Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Schenkman Publishing, 164–86.Google Scholar
Malakasis, C. and Sahraoui, N. (2020) Introducing gender into the theorization of health-related (un)deservingness: ethnographic insights from Athens and Melilla, in Sahraoui, N. (ed.), Borders Across Healthcare: Moral Economies of Healthcare and Migration in Europe, Oxford and New York: Berghahn Books.Google Scholar
Maynard-Moody, S. and Musheno, S. (2003) Cops, Teachers, Counselors. Stories from Front Lines of Public Service, Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maynard-Moody, S. and Musheno, M. (2012) ‘Social equities and inequities in practice: street-level workers as agents and pragmatists’, Public Administration Review, 72, S1, 16–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mewes, J. and Mau, S. (2012) ‘Unraveling working-class welfare chauvinism’, in Svallfors, S. (ed.), Contested Welfare States. Welfare Attitudes in Europe and Beyond, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 119–57.Google Scholar
Mezzadra, S. and Neilson, B. (2012) ‘Between inclusion and exclusion: on the topology of global space and borders’, Theory, Culture and Society 29, 4/5, 5875 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mezzadra, S. and Neilson, B. (2013) Border as Method, or, the Multiplication of Labour, Durham: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Miaz, J. (2015) ‘I wish they could stay, but it’s the law’. From the law to the decision: the social conditions of asylum adjudication in Switzerland’, International Conference on Public Policy, Milan.Google Scholar
Monnat, S. M. (2010) ‘The color of welfare sanctioning. Exploring the individual and contextual roles on TANF case closures and benefit reductions’, The Sociological Quarterly, 5, 678707.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Price, J. and Spencer, S. (2014) ‘City-level responses to migrant families with restricted access to welfare benefits. A European pilot study’, edited by Centre on Migration, Policy and Society, University of Oxford.Google Scholar
Reeskens, T. and van der Meer, T. (2015) ‘The color of benefits. A large-scale survey experiment on the importance of ethnicity as deservingness heuristic’, 25th February, MaDColloquium, WZB Berlin Social Science Center.Google Scholar
Sainsbury, D. (2012) Welfare States and Immigrant Rights, Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sales, R. and Hek, R. (2004) ‘Dilemmas of care and control. The work of an asylum team in a London borough’, in Hayes, D., Humphries, B. and Brown, C. (eds.), Social Work, Immigration and Asylum. Debates, Dilemmas and Ethical Issues for Social Work and Social Care Practice, London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 5976.Google Scholar
Satzewich, V. (2015) Points of Entry. How Canada’s Immigration Officers Decide Who Gets in, Vancouver: UBC Press.Google Scholar
Shutes, I. (2015) ‘Immigration and the gendered worker citizen’, in Anderson, B. and Hughes, V. (eds.), Citizenship and its Others, Migration, Diasporas and Citizenship Series, London: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Shutes, I. (2016) ‘Work-related conditionality and the access to social benefits of national citizens, EU and Non-EU citizens’, Journal of Social Policy, 454, 691707.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soss, J., Fording, R. and Schram, S.F. (2011) ‘The organization of discipline. From performance management to perversity and punishment’, Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, 21, Supplement 2, 203-32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spencer, S. (2016) ‘Postcode lottery for Europe’s undocumented children: unravelling an uneven geography of entitlements in the European Union’, American Behavioral Scientist, 60, 13, 1613–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spencer, S. and Delvino, N. (2019) ‘Municipal activism on irregular migrants: the framing of inclusive approaches at the local level’, Journal of Immigrant and Refugee Studies, 17,1, 2743.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Svallfors, S., Kulin, J. and Schnabel, A. (2012) ‘Age, class and attitudes toward government responsibilities’, in Svallfors, S. (ed.), Contested Welfare States. Welfare Attitudes in Europe and Beyond, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 158–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tervonen, M., Pellander, S. and Yuval-Davis, N. (2018) ‘Everyday bordering in the Nordic countries’, Nordic Journal of Migration Research, 8, 3, 139–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Triandafyllidou, A. (2003) ‘Immigration policy implementation in Italy. Organisational culture, identity processes and labour market control’, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 29, 2, 257–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tuckett, A. (2015) ‘Strategies of navigation: migrants’ everyday encounters with Italian immigration bureaucracy’, The Cambridge Journal of Anthropology, 33, 1, 113–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tummers, L. (2012) ‘Policy alienation of public professionals. The construct and its measurement’, Public Administration Review, 72, 4, 516–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van der Leun, J. (2003) Looking for Loopholes: Processes of Incorporation of Illegal Immigrants in the Netherlands, Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Oorschot, W. (2000) ‘Who should get what, and why? On deservingness criteria and the conditionality of solidarity among the public’, Policy and Politics, 28, 1, 3348.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Oorschot, W. (2008) ‘Solidarity towards immigrants in European welfare states’, International Journal of Social Welfare, 17,1, 314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Oorschot, W., Roosma, F., Meuleman, B. and Reeskens, T. (eds.) (2017) The Social Legitimacy of Targeted Welfare: Attitudes to Welfare Deservingness, Edward Elgar Publishing.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watkins-Hayes, C. (2009) The New Welfare Bureaucrats. Entanglements of Race, Class, and Policy Reform, Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Willen, S. S. (2012) ‘Introduction: migration, ‘illegality,’ and health: mapping embodied vulnerability and debating health-related deservingness’, Social Science and Medicine, 74, 6, 805−11.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Willen, S. S. and Cook, J. (2016) ‘Health-related deservingness’, in Thomas, F. (ed.), Handbook of Migration and Health, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire: Edward Elgar Publishing.Google Scholar
Yuval-Davis, N., Wemyss, G. and Cassidy, K. (2018) ‘Everyday bordering, belonging and the reorientation of British immigration legislation’, Sociology, 52, 2, 228–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yuval-Davis, N., Wemyss, G. and Cassidy, K. (2019) Bordering, Cambridge, UK: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar