2020
DOI: 10.1080/21632324.2018.1502004
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Gendered migrations and precarity in the post-Brexit-vote UK: the case of Polish women as workers and carers

Abstract: Polish migration to the UK post European Union enlargement has been studied extensively but limited attention has been paid to women and their gendered mobility. In this paper, I argue that it is key to turn attention to women migrants as those who are often responsible for reproductive labour and who raise future generations of workers and citizens. This is pivotal to consider in light of ageing European societies and the need for workers and Brexit. Arguably, precarity is characteristic of contemporary life.… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Existing studies on UK-based post-2004 CEE migrant women workers have a predominantly single-nationality focus (e.g. Polish), and tend not to centre on a single sector, with recent studies concerned with workplace interactions (Rzepnikowska, 2017), insecurity post-EU referendum (Duda-Mikulin, 2018) and gender roles (Aziz, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Existing studies on UK-based post-2004 CEE migrant women workers have a predominantly single-nationality focus (e.g. Polish), and tend not to centre on a single sector, with recent studies concerned with workplace interactions (Rzepnikowska, 2017), insecurity post-EU referendum (Duda-Mikulin, 2018) and gender roles (Aziz, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Official statistics show a roughly 40 per cent decrease in net migration of EU nationals between 2016 and 2017 to the UK in the wake of the Brexit referendum Swinford 2017;Travis 2017). Most studies covering the Brexit-migration nexus that use individual data are based on qualitative interviews with migrants living in the UK (Brahic and Lallement 2020;Duda-Mikulin 2020;Guma and Jones 2018;Lulle et al 2019Lulle et al , 2018Mazzilli and King 2019;Mohr 2020;Radziwinowiczówna, Kloc-Nowak, and Rosińska 2020;Ranta and Nancheva 2018). 2 These investigations provide detailed descriptions of the situation and reactions of migrants during and after the Brexit referendum.…”
Section: How the Brexit Process Unsettles Migrantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, despite facilitating the use of health services for immigrants, the environment for immigrants in a potentially post-Brexit United Kingdom is less welcoming, which along with the current economic austerity policies of the Conservative government, may have created some level of distrust, hostility, and confusion with respect to public institutions. Hence, even if these policies were at some point implemented, they were not communicated in a clear manner and may potentially not have been believed to be true, given the generally hostile environment towards immigrants (Duda-Mikulin 2020 ; Peitz, Dhont, and Seyd 2018 ; Portes 2020 ). In addition to this, equality is a complex matter that may require different policies according to the reality of each country or community (Walzer 1984 ; Phillips 1999 ).…”
Section: The Links Between Social Justice and Public Healthmentioning
confidence: 99%