2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-5661.2007.00241.x
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Keeping London working: global cities, the British state and London's new migrant division of labour

Abstract: This paper explores the emergence of a new ‘migrant division of labour’ in London. In contrast to a vision of ‘professionalization’, it shows that London's labour market has been characterized by processes of occupational polarization and that a disproportionate number of London's low‐paid jobs are now filled by foreign‐born workers. Drawing on original survey data, the paper explores the pay and conditions of London's low‐paid migrant workers and develops a framework for understanding the emergence of a new m… Show more

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Cited by 173 publications
(188 citation statements)
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References 35 publications
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“…The migrant labour market does not only follow economic laws and evolutions; since the beginning of the welfare state, these processes are mediated by state intervention (May et al 2007;Schierup 2006). The degree of protection in the labour market, and the rules for redistributing welfare benefits by public or semi-public institutions, are crucial to immigrants' lives, influencing everything from their chances to earn an income, through their geographical mobility decisions to their family lives.…”
Section: State Regulation Of Labour Marketsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The migrant labour market does not only follow economic laws and evolutions; since the beginning of the welfare state, these processes are mediated by state intervention (May et al 2007;Schierup 2006). The degree of protection in the labour market, and the rules for redistributing welfare benefits by public or semi-public institutions, are crucial to immigrants' lives, influencing everything from their chances to earn an income, through their geographical mobility decisions to their family lives.…”
Section: State Regulation Of Labour Marketsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…308-314, 321-323), with immigrants playing a crucial role in driving this polarisation, contributing both to the highly remunerated elites and, more massively, to the low-wage subproletariat. If this model of hour-glass social recomposition was laboratory-tested by studies of New York and Los Angeles, May, Wills, Datta, Evans, Herbert, and McIlwane (2007) and Wills, Datta, Evans, Herbert, May, and McIlwane (2010) show how the polarisation model also applies to London's 'new migrant divisions of labour'.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Migrants are as a group disproportionately concentrated in precarious and low-wage work and tend to cluster in certain low-skilled sectors and occupations (Wills et al 2010;Piore 1979). This has led to the emergence of new migrant divisions of labour at the bottom end of the labour market, depending on migrants' legal status and racial distinctions (Wills et al 2010;May et al 2007;McDowell et al 2009). It has been argued that the very availability of migrant workers, who can and are willing to work for lower rates, constructs labour markets that are increasingly dependent on migrants (McDowell et al 2009: 7;Favell 2008;Castells 1975;Bauder 2006).…”
Section: Cross-border Employment Relations In Europementioning
confidence: 99%