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dc.contributor.editorMARCHETTI, Sabrina
dc.contributor.editorTRIANDAFYLLIDOU, Anna
dc.date.accessioned2014-02-07T09:19:54Z
dc.date.available2014-02-07T09:19:54Z
dc.date.issued2013
dc.identifier.citationSpecial issue of Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, 2013, Vol. 11, No. 4en
dc.identifier.issn1556-2948
dc.identifier.issn1556-2956
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/29757
dc.description.abstractMany national and EU policy makers have heralded the idea of ‘circular’ migration with great enthusiasm as the solution to many of ‘our’ migration ‘problems’, supposedly addressing at once labour market shortages – by providing quickly and flexibly labour force on demand – and the migrant integration challenges – since circular migrants are not there ‘to stay’ and hence will create very limited if any integration challenges. This special issue/book is concerned with the realities of circularity, notably of migrant domestic and care workers who rotate between their country of origin and the country of settlement. We use the term migrant domestic and care worker to refer to the wider category of migrants employed in the private cleaning and home based care sectors. The special issue/book focuses on circular migrant domestic and care workers. ‘Circular’ migrants in these sectors work for a few months at destination and then find a replacement (a relative, a friend or simply a co-national) and go back home to take care of their own families (children, elderly parents). They stay for a couple of months at the country of origin and then return at destination to work. The circulation of migrant domestic and care workers goes against their settling down and thus avoids the related integration challenges that European societies would face if migrant domestic carers would bring their families over. However, at the same time, circular domestic work poses important integration challenges for the people involved as they somehow belong nowhere, they hang in-between the two countries. Circular domestic work provides no long term answer to the crisis of the European welfare systems and the ageing of native European populations. In addition it raises important welfare issues for the circulating migrant workers.
dc.description.tableofcontents-- Migrant Domestic and Care Workers in Europe: New Patterns of Circulation? -- Dreaming Circularity? Eastern European Women and Job Sharing in Paid Home Care -- Care Chains in Eastern and Central Europe: Male and Female Domestic Work at the Intersections of Gender, Class, and Ethnicity -- Uncertain and Experimental Circularity: An Investigation of the Trajectories of Migrant Domestic Workers in Lisbonen
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherHaworthen
dc.titleMigrant domestic and care workers in circularityen
dc.typeBooken
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