Canadian Public Policy
Volume 41, 2015, Pages s173-s187
The impact of skilled migration on foreign qualification recognition reform in Australia (Article)
Hawthorne L.*
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a
Centre for Health Policy, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia
Abstract
This paper has four aims. First, it defines the extent to which skilled migration to Australia has changed in recent decades in terms of scale, source country, and entry mode. Second, it describes Australia's federally driven foreign qualification recognition (FQR) reform strategy, including the pressure imposed by successive parliamentary reviews to improve outcomes. Third, it reports the growing engagement of select health regulators in reform, at a time when temporary workers constitute three-quarters of skilled migrants, and the question increasingly asked is whether regulatory bodies have the agility to facilitate twenty-first century labour migration flows. Finally, it assesses the contribution of qualification recognition reform to skilled migrants' recognition and early employment outcomes. Key learnings from Australia's FQR experience are then highlighted, of potential policy relevance to Canada. © Canadian Public Policy / Analyse de politiques, August / août 2015.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84944212273&doi=10.3138%2fcpp.2015-027&partnerID=40&md5=7c4e876a7c7546d9a220ab984e1f1548
DOI: 10.3138/cpp.2015-027
ISSN: 03170861
Cited by: 7
Original Language: English