2017
DOI: 10.1111/dech.12337
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Migrant Precarity in Asia: ‘Networks of Labour Activism’ for a Rights‐based Governance of Migration

Abstract: This article uses migrant precarity as a lens through which to analyse the issue of mobilization for migrants' rights by civil society. Such mobilization efforts are vital in light of the emergence of global migration governance, which tends to actively constrain considerations for migrants' human and labour rights. Asia's temporary migrants have been identified as a particularly precarious group of workers due to their specific position within the international division of labour, one that is defined by poorl… Show more

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Cited by 73 publications
(85 citation statements)
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“…The Asia-Pacific region accounts for 82.5 million or 32 percent of the world's international migrants (half of whom are women), and is home to seven of the world's top ten remittance receiving countries (IOM 2019). This is associated with an increase in South-South migration across the region (Piper, Rosewarne, and Withers 2017). Southeast Asia, the specific region where our research takes place, has one of the highest rates of internal displacement globally, in part due to increasingly frequent and costly environmental disasters and human-induced environmental change, a significant factor in ruralurban migration flows (Miller and Douglass 2018).…”
Section: Migrant Livelihood Pathways Rupture and The Covid-19 Pandemicmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The Asia-Pacific region accounts for 82.5 million or 32 percent of the world's international migrants (half of whom are women), and is home to seven of the world's top ten remittance receiving countries (IOM 2019). This is associated with an increase in South-South migration across the region (Piper, Rosewarne, and Withers 2017). Southeast Asia, the specific region where our research takes place, has one of the highest rates of internal displacement globally, in part due to increasingly frequent and costly environmental disasters and human-induced environmental change, a significant factor in ruralurban migration flows (Miller and Douglass 2018).…”
Section: Migrant Livelihood Pathways Rupture and The Covid-19 Pandemicmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Hence, our point of departure within this literature on GVCs and worker power is to examine collective worker power in a transnational manner to improve working conditions in specific production or factory locations in GVCs. This is in recognition of the increasing importance networks of labour activism --a network of labour activists as opposed to trade unions --have become for transnational labour activism in GVCs (Graz et al, 2019;Merk and Zajak, 2019;Piper et al, 2017;Zajak et al, 2017). Specifically, we focus on two forms of collective worker power, associational power and networked power, and connect them with how digital tools are used in their exercise including transnationally.…”
Section: Gvcs Workers and Powermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Western democracies, neoliberal economic development and the decline of the welfare state have transformed the state of redistributive justice from an egalitarian model to a more individualized, market‐based model of risk management. Discussion of precariousness has centered upon the increasing vulnerability and insecurity of employment and social welfare (Neilson and Rossiter ; Kalleberg ), the temporal and spatial dimensions of precarity (Porta et al ; Armano and Murgia ; Piper, Rosewarne, and Withers ), and the moral and ideological underpinnings of everyday struggles against precarity (Lee ; Stevens ).…”
Section: Law Precariousness and Precarizationmentioning
confidence: 99%