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  4. Who Receives More Help? The Role of Employer Support in Migration Processes
 
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Who Receives More Help? The Role of Employer Support in Migration Processes

Auteur(s)
Sandoz, Laure 
Institut de sociologie 
Santi, Fabian
Maison d'édition
Cham: Springer
Date de parution
2019
In
Migrants and Expats: The Swiss Migration and Mobility Nexus
De la page
57
A la page
81
Collection
IMISCOE Research Series
Mots-clés
  • Relocation support
  • Labour market
  • Migration channels
  • Highly skilled migrants
  • Migration management
  • Relocation support

  • Labour market

  • Migration channels

  • Highly skilled migran...

  • Migration management

Résumé
Research on migration usually focusses on the role of states in defining the “wanted” migrants who receive facilitated access to specific national territories. However, many countries apply a demand-driven admission policy in which employers play a central role in selecting candidates for migration. This article investigates the role of employers in the Migration-Mobility Nexus by analysing the relocation support they provide to different groups of migrants. We use a mixed-method approach based on a qualitative analysis of ethnographic data and a quantitative analysis of the Migration-Mobility Survey to observe who has more power to negotiate advantageous relocation conditions and in this sense represents a more “wanted” migrant for profit-oriented actors. Via a logistic regression model, we show that, all other variables being equal, employers tend to favour highly qualified men from Anglo-Saxon countries, whereas non-single women and people of West African and Portuguese origins have a much lower probability of receiving support from their employer. This article adds to the literature on the construction of migrant categories by showing that highly qualified men from rich Anglo-Saxon countries are actively given the possibility to become “expats”, whereas people with similar levels of qualification and experience but with a different gender, nationality or background have fewer opportunities to access employers’ support and migrate. In this sense, the very notion of “expat” is a construction that reflects power relations at a global level.
Identifiants
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/30351
_
10.1007/978-3-030-05671-1_3
Type de publication
book part
Dossier(s) à télécharger
 main article: 2022-12-01_1817_1800.pdf (748.37 KB)
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