Structural Injustice and Labour Migration – From Individual Responsibility to Collective Action
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23607Date
2021-07-18Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Egan, MagnusAbstract
This paper argues that the vast inequalities in access to migration opportunities and treatment of migrants constitute a structural injustice, and that although states are clearly the most powerful agents in migration injustices, individuals also bear a personal responsibility to ameliorate
these injustices. The argument builds on Young’s theory of structural injustice and critically
applies it to labour migration. The paper argues that wealthy migrants and citizens who benefit
from migrant labour have a responsibility to contribute towards ameliorating migration injustice
on account of their position of privilege, whereas disadvantaged migrants have a responsibility
due to their interest in changing their situation. It then considers how people might discharge such
an obligation through collective political action, pointing in particular to non-governmental organizations, labour unions, and local government. Finally, the paper addresses the objections that positing personal responsibility for labour migration is overly demanding and that the current labour
migration regime is meritocratic and fair. The article concludes by showing how this sort of stance
can be seen as interest-driven by privileged groups and argues for the role of disruptive politics in
overcoming it.
Publisher
WileyCitation
Egan. Structural Injustice and Labour Migration – From Individual Responsibility to Collective Action. Theoria. 2021Metadata
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