Rethinking labour migration: Covid-19, essential work, and systemic resilience

Many of the ‘essential workers’ during the Covid-19 pandemic are migrants, playing an important role for the continued functioning of basic services – notably health services, social care, and food supply chains. We argue that this role should be taken into account when assessing the impacts of migr...

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Main Authors: Anderson, B, Poeschel, F, Ruhs, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2021
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author Anderson, B
Poeschel, F
Ruhs, M
author_facet Anderson, B
Poeschel, F
Ruhs, M
author_sort Anderson, B
collection OXFORD
description Many of the ‘essential workers’ during the Covid-19 pandemic are migrants, playing an important role for the continued functioning of basic services – notably health services, social care, and food supply chains. We argue that this role should be taken into account when assessing the impacts of migrant workers and in the design of labour migration and related public policies. Existing studies highlight how the employment of migrant workers in essential services is shaped by interests of employers, sectoral policies, and national institutions. Considerations of how migrants may affect the systemic resilience of essential services – in a pandemic or similar crises – are pervasively absent, not only in policy-making but also in research. Drawing on several disciplines, we outline the concept of systemic resilience and develop implications for the analysis and regulation of labour migration. We call for shifting the focus from the role of migrants in specific occupations and sectors in particular countries to transnational systems of production and service provision. To study how migrant workers affect systemic resilience, we propose an agenda for comparative research along three lines: comparing migrants to citizens within the same system, comparing migrants’ roles across systems, and comparing strategies for resilience adopted in different systems.
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spelling oxford-uuid:c98e0bf5-a4cb-4ae6-b0f8-ccb0af4bd9412022-03-27T07:00:03ZRethinking labour migration: Covid-19, essential work, and systemic resilienceJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:c98e0bf5-a4cb-4ae6-b0f8-ccb0af4bd941EnglishSymplectic ElementsSpringer2021Anderson, BPoeschel, FRuhs, MMany of the ‘essential workers’ during the Covid-19 pandemic are migrants, playing an important role for the continued functioning of basic services – notably health services, social care, and food supply chains. We argue that this role should be taken into account when assessing the impacts of migrant workers and in the design of labour migration and related public policies. Existing studies highlight how the employment of migrant workers in essential services is shaped by interests of employers, sectoral policies, and national institutions. Considerations of how migrants may affect the systemic resilience of essential services – in a pandemic or similar crises – are pervasively absent, not only in policy-making but also in research. Drawing on several disciplines, we outline the concept of systemic resilience and develop implications for the analysis and regulation of labour migration. We call for shifting the focus from the role of migrants in specific occupations and sectors in particular countries to transnational systems of production and service provision. To study how migrant workers affect systemic resilience, we propose an agenda for comparative research along three lines: comparing migrants to citizens within the same system, comparing migrants’ roles across systems, and comparing strategies for resilience adopted in different systems.
spellingShingle Anderson, B
Poeschel, F
Ruhs, M
Rethinking labour migration: Covid-19, essential work, and systemic resilience
title Rethinking labour migration: Covid-19, essential work, and systemic resilience
title_full Rethinking labour migration: Covid-19, essential work, and systemic resilience
title_fullStr Rethinking labour migration: Covid-19, essential work, and systemic resilience
title_full_unstemmed Rethinking labour migration: Covid-19, essential work, and systemic resilience
title_short Rethinking labour migration: Covid-19, essential work, and systemic resilience
title_sort rethinking labour migration covid 19 essential work and systemic resilience
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AT poeschelf rethinkinglabourmigrationcovid19essentialworkandsystemicresilience
AT ruhsm rethinkinglabourmigrationcovid19essentialworkandsystemicresilience