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Collaborative Institutional Experimentation to Address the Exploitation and Marginalisation of Migrant Workers

Chris F. Wright (University of Sydney, Australia)
Kyoung-Hee Yu (University of Technology Sydney, Australia)
Stephen Clibborn (University of Sydney, Australia)

Protecting the Future of Work: New Institutional Arrangements for Safeguarding Labour Standards

ISBN: 978-1-80071-249-2, eISBN: 978-1-80071-248-5

Publication date: 20 January 2023

Abstract

Migrant workers are often concentrated in segments of the labour market characterised by low-paid and insecure work and which fall outside of the traditional ‘web of rules’ providing workers with protections. Institutional experimentation provides an opportunity to rectify this. This chapter examines the reasons why migrant workers are often subject to exploitation and marginalisation in the labour market. It then analyses the roles of the three main actors with the capacity to protect and improve migrant workers’ labour market position: governments, trade unions and community organisations. It proposes a ‘co-regulation’ approach based on collaborative institutional experimentation between these actors as the most effective way to address the exploitation and marginalisation of migrant workers.

Keywords

Citation

Wright, C.F., Yu, K.-H. and Clibborn, S. (2023), "Collaborative Institutional Experimentation to Address the Exploitation and Marginalisation of Migrant Workers", Colfer, B., Harney, B., McLaughlin, C. and Wright, C.F. (Ed.) Protecting the Future of Work: New Institutional Arrangements for Safeguarding Labour Standards (Trade Unionism), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 111-126. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80071-248-520221015

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

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