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Download pdf, 3 pages.
During the last decade, the will shown by the European
Union member states' of increasing borders controls enters, in apparent
contradiction with practices one can observe in few sectors of the
economy which rely on the exploitation of a labour force cheaper
and more readily available than national workers. Thus, foreigners,
usually finding themselves in a situation of legal inferiority vis-à-vis
nationals and often confronted with discriminations on the labour
market, turn frequently to the most precarious jobs, or contribute
to the functioning of activities witch involve a mixture of officially
regulated exchanges and informal practices, sometimes even illegal
ones. Without stating if these activities can be considered properly
as "work" or not, we will hypothesise that invisibility
imposed to the persons concerned, be they employed on specific contracts,
under international sub-contracting agreements, on moonlighting
or involved in illegal economies, relies globally on the precariousness
of foreigner's status and tends to modify traditional migration
patterns. We will discuss the fact that in modern European societies,
the position of the foreigner does not correspond any longer to
the status of the industrial not qualified worker situated at the
bottom of the social scale. Nowadays we observe that foreigners
have been reduced to marginal or semi marginal existence and have
been excluded to any protection by the state. We intend to examine
this situation and its consequences on migratory movements.
The objective of the conference will be to draw up
a comparative assessment of the researches carried out of the theme
of foreign workers and the new migratory dynamics in Europe, by
articulating several angles of approach.
On the one hand, taking into account the diversification of the
migrants' profiles, we intend to approach this theme according to
a gender perspective. The foreigner's activity, seems to
be, even more than nationals' one, touched by categorizations focusing
on the gender naturalised differences. Meanwhile, official policies
tend to reduce sexual inequalities in the main society, the marginal
branch of foreign labour, left to the employer's free will, seems
to follow another path, enhancing sexual specialization.
On the other hand, this gendered dimension is articulated,
in analysing the foreigners' work, by an ethnic dimension.
Questions related to ethnicity and racism - terms which respectively
describes phenomena of identification of the individuals and a brutal
classification of foreigners according to their origins - are in
effect, just as questions of gender, at the hearth of social relations
and, thus, of the management of the various forms of employment,
wage-earning or else, which are the purpose of this call for papers.
Eventually, many recently conducted studies have
underlined the increase of population movements and circulatory
migration within Europe. We intend to observe how this ever
increasing mobility is connected to the creation and emergence of
new types of jobs, unknown until recently and, from the migrants'
point of view, to original practices and migratory projects.
Confronting these research perspectives with particular
fieldworks, we will examine the diverse forms of employment of foreign
workers and new working relations in more or less deregulated economic
sectors, linking the question of the transformations of modern employment
to these of migratory practices. At first, and non-exhaustively,
four areas of investigation, yet insufficiently explored, have emerged
as particularly relevant to the investigation of this set of problems.
A first area concerns the wage-earning labour and
the diverse types of seasonal services in agriculture, where
precarious modalities of employment appear to have multiplied simultaneously
with the acceleration of the world economic competition. The status
of temporary farm labourers has become more and more complex in
the course of the last decades. The ever more complex nature of
the status of temporary farm labourers where the illegal use of
non declared work should not be neglected, have been made possible
thanks to the evolution of different European legislations which
installs additional legal instabilities. It seems, but this point
remains to be investigated further, that this situation forces foreign
workers to multiply their temporary occupations trough diverse sectors
of the economy and over large migratory space, better and better
connected by migrant social networks extended throughout Europe.
Another approach suggests interpreting this diversification and
the evolution of Community law as an answer to the collective resistance
of agricultural workers.
A second research area covers the in-house services.
These jobs are often performed as black market activities; but when
there are regulated they are either organised on the basis of self
employment or through the mediation of different associations. In
this way, these workers are subject to a double exclusion, both
because of the precariousness of the employment and because of derogations
from labour legislation. Moreover, workers in those jobs are embedded
in a complex set of social relations and domination patterns closely
linked to family and gender related structures. Thus, domestic jobs
represent simultaneously the externalisation, outside the family,
of domestic work and the persistence of family related domination
patterns. Work relations in this sector of the economy call us to
reconsider the opposition between wage-earning and unpaid domestic
activities and invite to examine the paternalistic approach toward
dependent work. At the same time, when occupied by migrant women
for limited periods, those jobs may allow them to continue occupying
a reproductive role in their own family while supplying it with
material resources.
A third research area is the prostitution
sector. Most of the time, these activities are relegated to the
margins of legislation while they are obviously fully integrated
to the socio-economical systems of the rich receiving countries.
Even if the sector is marked by harsh exploitation of nationals
and foreigners who, being often illegal, can hardly apply for the
State's protection, we must also consider the free will of a part
of these sexual workers. Prostitution is not a homogenous sector
and various situations arise. Those may range from criminal activities
implying human trafficking and sexual slavery to the case of sexual
activities conceived as a voluntary and consented upon wage-earning
activity which remains socially unacknowledged. Thus, it can be
considered by certain migrants as a temporary job, supplier of economic
resources. This area is still not much investigated by researchers
and deserves, from our point of view, a special attention as it
is a sector of employment very much concerned by foreigners' fragility.
Finally, a fourth area is related to illegal or
illegally performed activities. Illegality is not avoided in
the previous three areas, neither are violence or Mafiosi patterns;
thus this field is in a way transversal to the others. Trying to
go further, we advance the hypothesis that the official policies
of closing European borders, and consequently, the impossibility
for some migrants to access legal labour markets, open a large space
for various forms of irregularity, from the most tolerated to the
one severely punished by national authorities. Irregular employment
-that concerns nationals as well as foreigners- develops in some
economic sectors, such as construction, agriculture or services,
where it is said that it would be impossible to function otherwise,
as irregularity and regularity are in these cases closely inter-linked.
More generally, being available for work in our countries and, simultaneously
excluded from any legal situation, the State leaves to some foreigners
no choice but to enter into any kind of trafficking. This participation
in the informal economy can rather be on a self employed basis or
more or less close to a wage-earning job. In both cases, our point
will be to identify the specific relations that govern the sector
as well as the space of autonomy that legal exclusion can possibly
offer.
The above mentioned list should not be regarded as
restrictive. Any proposals related to a similar problematic but
concerning a different sector of activity are welcome. Papers may
present a cross analysis of several areas and perspectives or be
based on a single one. The European dimension of the conference
would give possibilities for comparative analysis such as between
new and old migration destinations or between receiving and destination
countries and those which has subsequently passed from the position
of a sending to the position of receiving countries. A particular
attention will be given to the submissions that interpret new migration
situations in the European space. Marginally, if presented in a
comparative perspective, presentations on other geographical areas
may be welcome.
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Abstracts should be in English or in French and should
be about one page long. They should contain the essence of the proposed
contribution, including: Title; Name and affiliation of the author(s),
with full address, phone/fax/e-mail of the principal author; Background
and purpose of the research; Data and methods used; Main results
and conclusions.
Abstracts should be forwarded by e-mail to migractivities@yahoo.fr
(.doc or .rtf format)
Deadline for abstracts: 1st May 2007
Notification of acceptance: June 2007
Nota: Acceptations will be confirmed following the
reception of the full papers.
Papers due: 15th October 2007
Working languages: English and French (translation
available during the conference)
Scientific committee:
Emanuela Abbatecola, University of Genoa, Italy
Amina Haddaoui, LAMES (UMR6127), France
Marta Kindler, Center for Migration Research (CMR), Warsaw University,
Poland
Blanca Miedes Ugarte, Universidad de la Huelva, Spain
Alain Morice, URMIS (UMR7032), Université de Paris 7, France
Joanna Napierala, Center for Migration Research (CMR), Warsaw University,
Poland
Marek Okolski, Center for Migration Research (CMR), Warsaw University,
Poland
Swanie Potot, URMIS (UMR7032), Université de Nice Sophia-Antipolis,
France
Andrea Rea, GERME, Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Belgium
Dolores Rodondo-Toronjo, Universidad de la Huelva, Spain
Francesca Scrinzi, Maitre de conferences, University of Glasgow,
United Kingdom
Ralitza Soultanova, GERME, Université Libre de Bruxelles
(ULB), Belgium
Local Organizing Committee:
Hervé Andres, URMIS-SOLIIS (UMR7032), Université
de Nice Sophia-Antipolis
Josée Darrieumerlou, URMIS-SOLIIS (UMR7032), Université
de Nice Sophia-Antipolis
Bénédicte Michalon, ADES (UMR 5185)
Alain Morice, URMIS (UMR7032), Université de Paris 7
Swanie Potot, URMIS-SOLIIS (UMR7032), Université de Nice
Sophia-Antipolis
Francesca Scrinzi, Maitre de conferences, University of Glasgow,
United Kingdom
For any further information, please see: http://www.unice.fr/migractivities
or contact: migractivities@yahoo.fr
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