"Do good and talk about it": informal representation and migrant-led civil society organizations' mediation between low-wage labor migrants and state institutions in the GCC countries.

IF 4.3 2区 社会学 Q1 DEMOGRAPHY
Comparative Migration Studies Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-12-18 DOI:10.1186/s40878-024-00417-9
Mira Burmeister-Rudolph
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Low-wage labor migrants experience major human and working rights abuses in the Gulf Cooperation Council countries despite national labor laws and signatures to various human rights conventions. On paper, India has established an institutional framework of transnational social protection for its officially estimated 5.5 million low-wage workers migrating to the Gulf Cooperation Council countries, e.g., financial emergency support, repatriation services, and walk-in centers. However, migrants in low-wage employment often cannot access substantive social rights in practice. Indian upper/middle-class migrant civil society groups mediate their access to Indian embassies' services and the destination countries' state institutions. The realization of social rights via informal, third-party representation stems from a representational disjuncture between low-wage labor migrants and the Indian state, which is rooted in their historical socioeconomic marginalization, limitations of the formal political system, and the constitutive role of informality in shaping and structuring citizen-state interactions in India. Through the lens of Piper and von Lieres' (2015) concept of mediated citizenship and based on data from semi-structured interviews and participant observation of migrant support networks in the Gulf countries, this article examines why mediation takes place and how volunteers speak and take action for marginalized migrants in low-wage employment and consequences of mediation. It argues that migrant volunteer organizations and individuals are powerful stakeholders in the migration governance in the GCC region, as they possess leverage over who has (better) access to state institutions and the provision of social and human rights. Their status as intermediaries underlines the disaggregation of Indian citizenship along class and caste lines, which can be (mis)-used by mediators to pursue their interests, resulting in ambiguous effects. The article contributes to perspectives on migration governance in the GCC region, transnational social policies, and migrant volunteering.

“行善谈善”:海湾合作委员会国家低收入劳工移民与国家机构之间的非正式代表和移民主导的民间社会组织调解。
尽管有国家劳动法和各种人权公约的签署国,低薪劳工移民在海湾合作委员会国家遭受严重的人权和工作权利侵犯。在纸面上,印度为其官方估计的550万移徙到海湾合作委员会国家的低薪工人建立了跨国社会保护的体制框架,例如财政紧急支助、遣返服务和无预约中心。然而,从事低工资工作的移徙者在实践中往往无法享有实质性的社会权利。印度上层/中产阶级移民民间社会团体调解他们进入印度大使馆和目的地国家的国家机构的服务。通过非正式的第三方代表实现社会权利源于低工资劳工移民与印度国家之间的代表性脱节,其根源在于他们历史上的社会经济边缘化,正式政治制度的局限性,以及非正式在塑造和构建印度公民-国家互动中的构成作用。通过Piper和von Lieres(2015)的中介公民身份概念,并基于对海湾国家移民支持网络的半结构化访谈和参与性观察数据,本文探讨了调解发生的原因,以及志愿者如何为低工资就业的边缘化移民说话和采取行动,以及调解的后果。报告认为,移民志愿者组织和个人在海湾合作委员会地区的移民治理中是强大的利益相关者,因为他们对谁(更好地)进入国家机构以及提供社会和人权具有影响力。他们作为中介人的地位凸显了印度公民身份在阶级和种姓界线上的分化,这可能(错误地)被中介人用来追求自己的利益,导致模棱两可的效果。本文对海湾合作委员会地区的移民治理、跨国社会政策和移民志愿服务等方面的观点有所贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Comparative Migration Studies
Comparative Migration Studies Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
8.60%
发文量
47
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