Journal of International Migration and Integration
Volume 15, Issue 3, 2014, Pages 371-386
'New Rules for Labour Immigration': Delving into the 2008 Swedish Reform of Labour Migration and Its Effects on Migrants' Well-Being (Article)
Bonfanti S.*
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a
Department of Economics, University of Florence, Via delle Pandette 9, 50127 Firenze, Italy, Marie Curie Early Stage Researcher, Department of Sociology, Umeå University, 901 87 Umeå, Sweden
Abstract
I have investigated the nature of the transformation triggered by the reform of labour mobility entitled 'New Rules for Labour Immigration', introduced in Sweden in 2008, and its impact on migrants' well-being. By applying the methodology of the 'What's the problem represented to be?' approach (Bacchi 2009), I show that the problem at which the reform was aimed is represented as a shortage of skills and labour. I argue that such a representation and the silences it invokes are underpinned by the paradigms of managed migration and of neoliberalism, thus marking a discontinuity in the political rhetoric of universalism which had been endorsed by Sweden since the beginning of the 1970s. I contend that such a formulation of the problem assumes and entails a conceptualisation of migrants as factors of production. This formulation stands in sharp opposition to the one advanced by the Human Development and Capability Approach to migration (UNDP 2009) which recognises migrants as human beings, endowed with capabilities, aspirations, and agency. Such reification of migrants implies that the reform regulates the stay of immigrants in Sweden with the purpose of maximising their contribution to Swedish economic growth, thus putting them in a vulnerable position which is likely to reduce their capability for work (Bonvin 2009). © 2013 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht.
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https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84903880489&doi=10.1007%2fs12134-013-0290-8&partnerID=40&md5=7450a362d23e8c8dd184f27df0d671a3
DOI: 10.1007/s12134-013-0290-8
ISSN: 14883473
Cited by: 4
Original Language: English