Results for 'Migration Industry'

965 found
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  1. Interrogating the Migration Industry[REVIEW]Alex Sager - 2016 - Global Justice: Theory Practice Rhetoric 9 (1):93-98.
    Review of Ruben Andersson,Illegality, Inc. (Oakland, CA: University of California Press, 2014)and Amy Nethery and Stephanie J. Silverman(eds.), Immigration Detention: The Migration of a Policy and its Human Impact.(London and New York: Routledge, 2015).
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  2.  12
    Gaining control? bilateral labor agreements and the shared interest of sending and receiving countries to control migrant workers and the illicit migration industry.Hila Shamir & Yuval Livnat - 2022 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 23 (2):65-94.
    Countries increasingly have been entering bilateral labor agreements as a tool for the regulation and governance of short-term temporary labor migration worldwide. However, these are often confidential legal instruments, and consequently we know relatively little about their actual content and impact, and why countries choose to enter them. This Article complements existing explanations in the literature regarding the reasons why countries enter BLAs and their potential to create and improve migrant workers’ rights. Based on a detailed content analysis of (...)
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  3.  13
    Industrial Relations, Migration, and Neoliberal Politics: The Case of the European Construction Sector.Ian Greer & Nathan Lillie - 2007 - Politics and Society 35 (4):551-581.
    Transnational politics and labor markets are undermining national industrial relations systems in Europe. This article examines the construction industry, where the internationalization of the labor market has gone especially far. To test hypotheses about di ferences between “national systems,” the authors examine the United Kingdom, Finland, and Germany, alongside European-level policy making. Regardless of overall national institutional framework, employers seek to avoid industrial relations rules, while unions attempt to relocalize labor relations. Both use shop-floor, national, and European power resources. (...)
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  4.  17
    Labor Migration Policy and the Governance of the Construction Industry in Israel and Japan.David Bartram - 2004 - Politics and Society 32 (2):131-170.
    Significant “guestworker” immigration occurs when the state lacks the capacity to inhibit rent-seeking by private interests that benefit from imported labor. Policies allowing imported labor result in government subsidies for employers’ profits. These subsidies are usefully conceived as rents. A developmentalist state will constrain the creation of such rents, especially because imported labor carries long-term costs not borne by employers and inhibits productivity growth and positive structural change. A clientelist state falls prey to this type of rent-seeking because of a (...)
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  5. Sex at the Margins: Migration, labour markets and the rescue industry.Laura Maria Agustin - 2007
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  6. Nicole Vitellone Sex at the Margins: Migration, Labour Markets and the Rescue Industry.L. M. Agustin - 2008 - Body and Society 14 (2):123.
     
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  7.  22
    Labor Migration in Israel.Rebeca Raijman & Adriana Kemp - 2011 - ProtoSociology 27:177-193.
    This paper describes the ways by which state regulations created fertile soil on which legal labor migration in Israel developed into an unfree labor force. We show how state policies effectively subject foreign workers to a high degree of regulation, giving employers and manpower agencies mechanisms of control that they do not have over Israeli citizens. These mechanisms create a group of non-citizen workers that are more desirable as cheap, flexible, exploitable and expendable employees through enforcing atypical employment relations: (...)
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  8.  13
    “Trafficking in women” as migration history: gendered mobility between France and Cuba (early twentieth century).Elisa Camiscioli - 2020 - Clio 51:97-117.
    En se concentrant sur la route transatlantique entre la France et Cuba, cet article explore les débats du début du xxe siècle sur la « traite des femmes » à travers les lunettes de l’histoire des migrations. Diverses sources attestent de la prédominance des prostituées, des proxénètes et des trafiquants français dans l’industrie du sexe à Cuba. La question de savoir si les Françaises étaient des migrantes entreprenantes ou des victimes de la traite reste cependant ouverte pour les contemporains. L’article (...)
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  9. Climate Migration and Moral Responsibility.Raphael J. Nawrotzki - 2014 - Ethics, Policy and Environment 17 (1):69-87.
    Even though anthropogenic climate change is largely caused by industrialized nations, its burden is distributed unevenly with poor developing countries suffering the most. A common response to livelihood insecurities and destruction is migration. Using Peter Singer's ‘historical principle’, this paper argues that a morally just evaluation requires taking causality between climate change and migration under consideration. The historical principle is employed to emphasize shortcomings in commonly made philosophical arguments to oppose immigration. The article concludes that none of these (...)
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  10.  20
    Migration Intermediaries and Codes of Conduct: Temporary Migrant Workers in Australian Horticulture.Elsa Underhill, Dimitria Groutsis, Diane van den Broek & Malcolm Rimmer - 2018 - Journal of Business Ethics 153 (3):675-689.
    Over recent decades, developments in network governance have seen governments around the world cede considerable authority and responsibility to commercial migration intermediaries for recruiting and managing temporary migrant labour. Correspondingly, a by-product of network governance has been the emergence of soft employment regulation in which voluntary codes of conduct supplement hard legal employment standards. This paper explores these developments in the context of temporary migrant workers employed in Australian horticulture. First the paper analyses the growing use of temporary migrant (...)
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  11.  16
    Visualizing migration processes in the Southern Urals’ cities: from the social space transforming to its deforming.Sergey Gordeev, Sergey Zyryanov & Daria Averyanova - 2021 - Sotsium I Vlast 4:94-106.
    The authors present the results of studying migration processes as one of the factors that determine the transformation of the regional social space. Applying migration indicators to assessing prospective spatial changes presupposes a multivariate analysis of developing complex heterogeneous systems. The version of applying problem-oriented visualization tools presented by the authors significantly expands the possibilities of such an analysis. Assessment, systematization and subsequent classification of migration characteristics are considered within the framework of a multi-stage graphical digital analysis (...)
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  12.  14
    Migration Intermediaries and Codes of Conduct: Temporary Migrant Workers in Australian Horticulture.Malcolm Rimmer, Diane Broek, Dimitria Groutsis & Elsa Underhill - 2018 - Journal of Business Ethics 153 (3):675-689.
    Over recent decades, developments in network governance have seen governments around the world cede considerable authority and responsibility to commercial migration intermediaries for recruiting and managing temporary migrant labour. Correspondingly, a by-product of network governance has been the emergence of soft employment regulation in which voluntary codes of conduct supplement hard legal employment standards. This paper explores these developments in the context of temporary migrant workers employed in Australian horticulture. First the paper analyses the growing use of temporary migrant (...)
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  13.  24
    Active Industrial Citizenship of Domestic Workers: Lessons Learned from Unionizing Attempts in Israel and the United Kingdom.Virginia Mantouvalou & Einat Albin - 2016 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 17 (1):321-350.
    In this Article we offer a new conceptualization of industrial citizenship, which is sensitive to gender and migration status. Our conceptualization builds on the theoretical distinction between active and passive citizenship and the analyses of active industrial citizenship. We suggest that active industrial citizenship should be detached from the old and influential tradition of trade unionism that is connected with the public/private divide. Our proposed conceptualization leads to attaching value to activities related to ethics of care and to the (...)
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  14.  16
    Book review: Laura Maria Agustin, Sex at the Margins: Migration, Labour Markets and the Rescue Industry. London: Zed Books, 2007. 268 pp. (incl. index). ISBN 978—1—84277—860—9, £16.99 (pbk). [REVIEW]Meena Poudel - 2009 - Feminist Theory 10 (1):133-134.
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  15.  20
    Book Review: Sex at the Margins: Migration, Labour Markets and the Rescue Industry by Laura María Agustin London and New York: Zed Press, 2007, pp. 248, ISBN 978 1 84277 860 9. [REVIEW]Nicole Vitellone - 2008 - Body and Society 14 (2):123-125.
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  16.  43
    Ethical Pitfalls of Temporary Labour Migration: A Critical Review of Issues. [REVIEW]Zinovijus Ciupijus - 2010 - Journal of Business Ethics 97 (S1):9-18.
    The article discusses a particularly contentious aspect of labour mobility—state sanctioned and controlled temporary labour migration. In contrast to forced migration, which always has had a recognizable ethical dimension in terms of the universal right to asylum, temporary labour migration has tended to be viewed as an exclusively economic and thus ethically neutral phenomenon. This article presents a diametrically opposite approach to temporary labour migration: it is argued that this form of labour mobility creates a plethora (...)
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  17.  10
    Book review: Pity and courage in commercial sex Laura María Agustín sex at the margins: Migration, labour markets and the rescue industry London: Zed books, 2007, 224 pp., isbn 978-1-8427-7859-3 (hbk), 978-1-8427-7860-9. [REVIEW]Giulia Garofalo - 2008 - European Journal of Women's Studies 15 (4):419-422.
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  18.  14
    Book review: Sex, work and migration: The dynamics and regimes of care and control Laura Maria Agustin sex at the margins: Migration, labour markets and the rescue industry London: Zed books, 2007, 224 pp., isbn 9781-84277-8609. [REVIEW]Maggie O'Neill - 2008 - European Journal of Women's Studies 15 (2):142-145.
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  19.  10
    The International Law of Economic Migration.Joel P. Trachtman - 2015 - In Dennis Patterson (ed.), A Companion to European Union Law and International Law. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 506–518.
    This chapter focuses on the implications of economically self‐interested behavior by voters and lobbyists, rather than important issues of irredentism, demagoguery, and security. It also focuses on the political problems of liberalizing migration between poor and wealthy states. Economists often support temporary migration in order to guard against potential adverse effects of brain drain. International organizations can serve to engage in surveillance, communication, and adjudication in order to enforce rules. Responsibility for international economic migration could be assigned (...)
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  20.  23
    Prediction of Fish Migration Caused by Ocean Warming Based on SARIMA Model.Feng Xu, Yu-Ang Du, Hong Chen & Jia-Ming Zhu - 2021 - Complexity 2021:1-9.
    Herring and mackerel are two of the most important pillars of Scottish fisheries. In recent years, global warming has caused a gradual rise in ocean temperatures. In order to survive and reproduce, herring and mackerel populations will migrate. This will have a huge impact on Scotland’s fisheries. Therefore, we need to predict the relocation of fish stocks in advance, make timely adjustments to the fishing range, and minimize the loss of the fishing industry. In this article, we subdivide the (...)
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  21.  14
    An Ethnography of Global Labour Migration.Hsiao-Hung Pai - 2004 - Feminist Review 77 (1):129-136.
    An ever more aggressive anti-migration propaganda war is being waged by the majority of British media, where migration in any form is consistently portrayed on the basis of forming and consolidating a response to a security threat. While tens of thousands of migrant workers are exchanging their sweated labour for meagre wages in the 3-D jobs — dirty, dangerous and degrading — in Britain's food-processing, electronic manufacturing, catering, cleaning and hospitality industries outside any mechanism of labour protection, Britain (...)
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  22.  15
    Grass Is Greener on the Other Side: Return Migration of Indian Engineers and Scientists in Academia.Roli Varma & Meghna Sabharwal - 2017 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 37 (1):34-44.
    Studies on skilled return migration from developed to developing countries have focused on the industrial sector. This article focuses on why academic engineers and scientists from developing countries leave developed countries to return to their countries of birth. Data for this study comes from a National Science Foundation funded study with 83 engineers and scientists who returned to India after study and work in U.S. universities. Better career prospects in India namely ample funding available for research, less competition for (...)
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  23. Trafficking and women's rights: Beyond the sex industry to 'other industries'.Christien van den Anker - 2006 - Journal of Global Ethics 2 (2):163 – 182.
    In this article I put forward three lines of argument. Firstly, the current debate on trafficking in human beings focuses narrowly on exploitation in the sex industry. This has produced a stand-off between moralists and liberals which is detrimental to developing strategies to combat trafficking. Moreover, this narrow focus leads to missing out the large numbers of women who are trafficked into other industries. It also masks some of the root causes of trafficking. In this article I therefore compare (...)
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  24.  15
    Forced labour in supply chains: Rolling back the debate on gender, migration and sexual commerce.Rutvica Andrijasevic - 2021 - European Journal of Women's Studies 28 (4):410-424.
    This article makes a conceptual contribution to the broader literature on unfree labour by challenging the separate treatment of sexual and industrial labour exploitation both by researchers and in law and policy. This article argues that the prevailing focus of the supply chain literature on industrial labour has inadvertently posited sexual labour as the ‘other’ of industrial labour thus obfuscating how the legal blurring of boundaries between industrial and service labour is engendering new modalities of the erosion of workers’ rights (...)
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  25.  45
    Transition from cultural diversity to multiculturalism: perspectives from offshore industry in India.Sreelekha Mishra, Balaganapathi Devarakonda & Bharat Kumar - 2015 - AI and Society 30 (2):283-289.
    Globalization is not just an economic phenomenon as economic transactions cannot take place without parallel flows of ideas, cultural products and people. The traditional notion of immigrants, i.e. those who leave one country to settle into another while leaving behind their past, is inextricably linked to the other flows that constitute globalization. The traditional notions of immigrants, i.e. movements back and forth between sending and receiving countries have historically been a fact of life for many immigrant groups. However, what is (...)
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  26.  32
    Brain drain in Pakistan's pharmaceutical industry: factors and solutions.Hassan Ali Khan, Asghar Hayyat, Muhammad Ziaullah, Zia-ur Rehman & Muhammad Aqib Shafiq - 2024 - Business and Society Review 129 (1):130-150.
    This study sheds light on strategies for retaining skilled pharmacists in Pakistan's pharmaceutical sector, offering valuable insights for both academia and industry stakeholders by investigating the impact of human resource management practices, including training and development, compensation and rewards, job performance, and job satisfaction, on employee retention. It also examines the moderating role of career growth in this context. Theoretical foundations are grounded in international migration theories and social exchange theory, providing a comprehensive framework for the study. A (...)
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  27.  23
    Constructing Eroticized Latinidad: Negotiating Profitability in the Stripping Industry.Cristina Khan - 2019 - Gender and Society 33 (5):702-721.
    Through the analysis of an 18-month ethnography at an exotic dance club located in the Northeastern United States, I uncover how Latina exotic dancers manage their participation in exotic dance by deploying constructions of Latinidad as embodied cues. I focus on Playpen’s weekly event, “Latina Night,” to demonstrate how racialized, sexualized, and gendered constructs relative to Latinidad are produced and regulated in this exotic dance setting. Study participants draw on embodied markers to negotiate how their bodies are read. Those markers (...)
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  28.  29
    Customer Churn Prediction in Telecommunication Industry. A Data Analysis Techniques Approach.Denisa Maria Melian, Andreea Dumitrache, Stelian Stancu & Alexandra Nastu - 2022 - Postmodern Openings 13 (1 Sup1):78-104.
    Telecommunications is one of the most dynamic sectors in the market, where the customer base is an important pawn in receive safe revenues, so is important to focus attention is paid to maintaining them with an active status. Migrating customers from one network to another varies among telecommunication companies depending on different factors such as call quality, pricing plan, minute consumption, data, sms facilities, customer billing issues, etc. Determining an effective predictive model helps detect early warning signals when churn occurs (...)
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  29.  18
    Acts of Citizenship in Time and Space among Agricultural Migrant Workers in Quebec during the COVID-19 Pandemic.Guillermo Candiz, Tanya Basok & Danièle Bélanger - 2023 - Studies in Social Justice 17 (1):91-111.
    Migrant farm workers recruited under Canada’s temporary employment programs work in difficult environments, under poor working conditions, and live in unsafe housing in remote rural communities. Fearful of repatriation or replacement, many accept their working and living conditions as part of a necessary sacrifice to improve their living conditions and those of their families in the countries of origin. At the same time, some migrant farm workers assert their agency by escaping from farms, subverting regulations, or challenging various forms of (...)
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  30.  13
    Ce que fait l’assignation à circuler aux temporalités de travail.Taher Labadi - 2021 - Temporalités 33.
    Cet article traite du rapport contraint au temps de la main-d’œuvre migrante employée dans les zones industrielles qualifiées en Jordanie. En m’appuyant sur une enquête qualitative réalisée sur les lieux de production, de travail et de vie des travailleurs, je propose une réflexion sur les effets de la migration circulaire sur les temporalités du travail des migrants. Dans une industrie textile tournée vers l’exportation et dominée par des entreprises étrangères, je montre que l’ajustement du temps de séjour sur le (...)
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  31. Experts, Refugees, and Radicals: Borders and Orders in the Hotspot of Crisis.Anna Carastathis & Myrto Tsilimpounidi - 2018 - Theory in Action 11 (4):1-21.
    In July 2016, we participated in a conference in Lesvos (Greece) on borders, migration, and the refugee crisis. The Crossing Borders conference was framed in contrast with the ad-hoc humanitarianism that was being implemented, to the extent that it seemed to offer an opportunity to think about the refugee crisis, militarism, and austerity capitalism in systemic terms. This paper is based on an intervention we staged in the closing panel of the Crossing Borders conference, where we read a statement (...)
     
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  32.  13
    Dawn and the Political.Keith Ansell-Pearson & Rebecca Bamford - 2020 - In Keith Ansell-Pearson & Rebecca Bamford (eds.), Nietzsche’s Dawn: Philosophy, Ethics, and the Passion of Knowledge. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 205–224.
    Nietzsche's wider political thinking has been widely recognized as therapeutic in orientation, as part of its connection to the history of psychology. This chapter examines the remarks that Nietzsche does make with respect to the political in Dawn, focusing on his concern with the effects on humanity of capital and industrial development upon Europeans. It explores his remarks on migration as a therapeutic measure for the workers of Europe and considers some of the problematic claims involved in Nietzsche's appeal (...)
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  33. The private sector is hoarding AI researchers: what implications for science?∗.Roman Jurowetzki, Daniel S. Hain, Kevin Wirtz & Stefano Bianchini - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-8.
    The migration of artificial intelligence (AI) researchers from academia to industry has recently sparked concerns about its implications for scientific progress. Can academia retain enough talent to shape AI advancements and counterbalance the growing influence of corporate AI labs? Analyzing OpenAlex data, we find a significant transition of premier talent to industry roles over the past decade, particularly to major tech firms. Young, highly cited scholars from leading institutions are the most likely to make this move. Following (...)
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  34.  87
    The 'Brain Drain' of physicians: historical antecedents to an ethical debate, c. 1960–79.David Wright, Nathan Flis & Mona Gupta - 2008 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 3:24.
    Many western industrialized countries are currently suffering from a crisis in health human resources, one that involves a debate over the recruitment and licensing of foreign-trained doctors and nurses. The intense public policy interest in foreign-trained medical personnel, however, is not new. During the 1960s, western countries revised their immigration policies to focus on highly-trained professionals. During the following decade, hundreds of thousands of health care practitioners migrated from poorer jurisdictions to western industrialized countries to solve what were then deemed (...)
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  35.  43
    Privatized Biomedical Research, Public Fears, and the Hazards of Government Regulation: Lessons from Stem Cell Research. [REVIEW]David B. Resnick - 1999 - Health Care Analysis 7 (3):273-287.
    This paper discusses the hazards of regulating controversial biomedical research in light of the emergence of powerful, multi-national biotechnology corporations. Prohibitions on the use of government funds can simply force controversial research into the private sphere, and unilateral or multilateral research bans can simply encourage multi-national companies to conduct research in countries that lack restrictive laws. Thus, a net effect of government regulation is that research migrates from the public to the private sphere. Because private research receives less oversight and (...)
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  36.  7
    Heydər Əliyev ideyalarının postmünaqişə dövrü və miqrasiya idarəçiliyi.Aqil Əhmədov - 2023 - Metafizika 6 (1):44-68.
    The ideas of prominent statesmen and politicians who served to preserve and transmit the traditions of statehood to future generations are always relevant. The ideas of Heydar Aliyev, who occupied an invaluable place in the history of the construction and national development of the Republic of Azerbaijan, who was awarded the high title of national leader by the people, put forward new calls for peace and cooperation in the post-conflict period. The 30-year period that has passed since the restoration of (...)
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  37.  16
    Perspectives on Participation in Continuous Vocational Education Training–An Interview Study.Christin Siegfried & Josephine Berger - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    In European industrialized countries, a large number of companies in the healthcare, hotel, and catering sectors, as well as in the technology sector, are affected by demographic, political, and technological developments resulting in a greater need of skilled workers with a simultaneous shortage of skilled workers (CEDEFOP, 2015, 2016). Consequently, employers have to address workers who have not been taken into account such as low-skilled workers, workers returning from a career break, people with a migrant background, older people, and jobseekers (...)
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  38. Why Philosophy Must Go Global: A Manifesto.Jonardon Ganeri - 2016 - Confluence 4:134-186.
    The world of academic philosophy is now entering a new age, one defined neither by colonial need for recognition nor by postcolonial wish to integrate. The indicators of this new era include heightened appreciation of the value of world philosophies, the internationalization of the student body, the philosophical pluralism which interaction and migration in new global movements make salient, growing concerns about diversity within a still too-white faculty body and curricular canon, and identification of a range of deep structural (...)
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  39.  36
    The Political Acceptability of Time-Limited Labor Mobility: Five Levers Opening the Overton Window.Lant Pritchett - 2023 - Public Affairs Quarterly 37 (3):284-306.
    A substantial expansion of migration and labor mobility in the rich industrial countries currently seems outside the Overton window, the range of acceptable political discourse. If anything, the general political mood seems to favor even greater restrictiveness of immigration. I argue that five trends that are already well underway could, within a decade or less, bring much larger flows of migrants and labor mobility—including a major expansion of time-limited labor mobility—squarely onto the domestic political agenda in rich industrial countries.
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  40.  1
    Critical reflection in online education: Habermas, Marcuse and flattening “classroom” hierarchies during COVID-19.Shantanu Tilak & Geoffrey Pelfrey - 2020 - Digital Culture and Education.
    COVID-19 has necessitated inquiry into the capacity of technology to build learning communities to solve problems beyond proximal boundaries. Platforms like Zoom offer pathways for communication and content-delivery, but little stimulus for collective online outcomes (projects/learning-objects/discussion forums). We aim to examine how monetized platforms fit within Marcuse’s technological rationality and its capacity to exercise social control. This owes to dominance of aspects of technology related to providing content rather than how we direct agency towards using it. Such control is reminiscent (...)
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  41.  32
    Contextualizing Voice and Stakeholders: Researching Employment Relations, Immigration and Trade Unions. [REVIEW]Miguel Martínez Lucio & Heather Connolly - 2010 - Journal of Business Ethics 97 (S1):19-29.
    This article aims to outline some of the ways in which issues of migration and employment relations have been studied in the European context, cross referencing recent interventions in the USA. The argument is a discussion of some of the different dimensions of migration and the way debates within Industrial Relations have been shaped. More specifically, the article will look at the way trade unions have made the ethical turn towards questions of migration and equality. The article (...)
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  42. Natural Substances and Artificial Products.Pierre Laszlo - 1995 - Diogenes 43 (172):105-125.
    One of the defining features of the modern age is the apotheosis of natural history. Natural History is, of course, the title of Buffon's monumental work, written in the second half of the 18th century. Also, until the rise of the Industrial Revolution, natural history provided an integrated technology, stretching from the voyages of discovery to the establishment of colonies devoted to the cultivation of the resources discovered there, whether one considers sugar cane in its migration west, or vanilla (...)
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  43.  17
    Collisions at the Crossroads: How Place and Mobility Make Race by Genevieve Carpio (review).Jared Friesen - 2021 - Environment, Space, Place 13 (2):129-132.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:129 Collisions at the Crossroads: How Place and Mobility Make Race BY GENEVIEVE CARPIO Oakland, California: University of California Press, 2019 REVIEWED BY JARED FRIESEN In Collisions at the Crossroads: How Place and Mobility Make Race, Professor of Chicana and Chicano Studies Genevieve Carpio systematically uncovers several of the insidious forms that power takes in order to construct racial inequality. Settlement, mobility, and immobility have served to draw distinctions (...)
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  44.  14
    Феномен золотих і алмазних "лихоманок" як територіальне, гірниче й соціокультурне освоєння материкових просторів північної америки та австралії.Gayko Gennadiy & Biletsky Volodymyr - 2017 - Схід 3 (149):28-35.
    This series of articles systematizes the events of settlement and economic development of vast spaces of North America, Australia, South Africa and North Asia, which are related to the movement of gold and diamond hunters. A chronological survey of the events is offered, the general phenomenon analyzed as well as specific aspects of its historical, mining, geological and organizational constituents covered. The material is divided into three separate but thematically united parts which describe the phenomenon of gold rush-spontaneous large-scale gold (...)
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  45.  88
    Mining as the Working World of Alexander von Humboldt’s Plant Geography and Vertical Cartography.Patrick Anthony - 2018 - Isis 109 (1):28-55.
    By resituating Alexander von Humboldt in the “working world” of mining, this essay offers a case study of the way in which industry has shaped practice and theory in the history of science. While Humboldt’s experience as a miner in Saxony and Prussia provided him a venue in which to study fossilized vegetation, revealing a fundamental link between the migrations of plants and of peoples, industrial concerns about miners’ safety inspired a study of the interplay between plants and people (...)
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  46.  14
    Феномен золотих "лихоманок" як територіальне, гірниче й соціокультурне освоєння північної азії.Gennadiy Gayko & Volodymyr Biletsky - 2017 - Схід 5 (151):34-41.
    This series of articles systematizes the events of settlement and economic development of vast spaces of North America, Australia, South Africa and North Asia, which are related to the movement of gold and diamond hunters. A chronological survey of the events is offered, the general phenomenon analyzed as well as specific aspects of its historical, mining, geological and organizational constituents covered. The material is divided into three separate but thematically united parts which describe the phenomenon of gold rush-spontaneous large-scale gold (...)
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  47.  86
    The archaeological framework of the Upper Paleolithic revolution.Ofer Bar-Yosef - 2007 - Diogenes 54 (2):3 - 18.
    The Upper Palaeolithic Revolution, sometimes called ‘the Creative Explosion’, is seen as the period when the forefathers of modern forager societies emerged. Similarly to the Industrial and Neolithic Revolutions, it represents a short time span when numerous inventions appeared and cultural changes occurred. The inventions were in the domain of technology, that is, shaping of new stone tool forms, longdistance exchange of raw materials, the use of bone, antler and ivory as well as rare minerals for the production of domestic (...)
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  48.  18
    Proceedings of the British Academy.Anthony Heath, Richard Breen & Christopher Whelan (eds.) - 1999 - Proceedings of the British Aca.
    This is the first systematic study of the social and political development of the two Irelands since partition. Scholars from various disciplines here consider economic development, political history, demography and migration, religion, family, industrial relations, education and many other factors.
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  49.  32
    Images of work, images of defiance: engaging migrant farm worker voice through community-based arts.J. Adam Perry - 2019 - Agriculture and Human Values 36 (3):627-640.
    This article addresses a stated need within the food justice movement scholarship to increase the attention paid to the political socialization of hired farm hands in industrial agriculture. In Canada, tackling the problem of farm worker equity has particular social and political contours related to the Canadian horticultural industry’s reliance on a state-managed migrant agricultural labour program designed to fill the sector’s labour market demands. As Canada’s Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program produces relations of ‘unfree labour’, engaging migrant farm workers (...)
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  50.  17
    The subject as a category for citizenship analysis.Héctor Cárcamo - 2016 - Cinta de Moebio 56:231-242.
    The essay aims to offer some thoughts about the configuration of the subject as a category of analysis for the understanding of citizenship. For this purpose, two key dimensions are outlined: ideal and empirical. The arguments presented allow an understanding of citizenship as a symbolic construct fraught with tension, beyond the legal and administrative dimension; for example, through its links with migration, racism and identity. Finally, it presents what we have called the ideal-empirical subject, as a construct that contributes (...)
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