A normative and legal analysis of the convergence of labour and migration policies: impacts on migrant workers, undocumented workers, refugees, and asylum seekers in the European Union
A normative and legal analysis of the convergence of labour and migration policies: impacts on migrant workers, undocumented workers, refugees, and asylum seekers in the European Union
Date
2024
Authors
Impiglia, Dalia
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
This thesis's research considers a normative understanding of EU migration policy in
tandem with the practice of labour rights for migrant workers, refugees and asylum seekers, and
undocumented workers. The reason to uncover the relationship between labour rights for migrant
workers and migration comes from the persisting incidences of exploitation in the EU that affect
non-EU citizens exponentially more than EU workers. Understanding why this trend occurs and
what systems are in place to prevent it is crucial today and requires moral and legal assessment.
The first half of the research places the EU's approach to labour migration in normative
contexts. The case for Open Borders migration, based on the work of Joseph Carens, posits an
egalitarian liberal ideology seemingly emulated by the border-free EU regime. However, the
fortification of the EU external border and increasing securitization of the EU represent the ideas
of Christopher H Wellman's right of association. Although oppositional, it is only in tandem that
we may understand the EU's labour policies differentiating non-EU workers.
The second half of the research focuses on how the current practice of sponsored work
permits, employer's sanctions, migration policy filters, transnational guest worker schemes, and
exploitation and trafficking prevention schemes all impact labour rights for migrant workers.
The findings show that economic self-interest and historical colonial relations cause
migrant workers to live and work in precarity and residential insecurity and face significant
discrimination. Low-skilled, low-wage employment and ethnic economies significantly have
heightened risks of exploitation by the shadow economy, the informal sector, and state
regulation.
Description
Second semester University: Sofia University St. Kliment Ohridski
Keywords
migrations,
migrant workers,
European Union,
refugees,
asylum seekers,
employment policy,
labour exploitation