Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1637Hits:19167048Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Article   Article
 

ID134372
Title ProperKeeping labour mobility informal
Other Title Information the lack of legality of Central Asian migrants in Kazakhstan
LanguageENG
AuthorDave, Bhavna
Summary / Abstract (Note)Kazakhstan's legal–regulatory framework provides for a small number of quotas for highly skilled foreign workers but has no provisions for legal employment of semi-skilled or low-skilled migrants from the Central Asian states, who enter under the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) visa-free regime and work informally in construction, household and service sectors. The lack of acknowledgement of the scale of informal labour migration has denoted an act of strategic neglect on the part of the state, allowing it to render migrant labour illegal, disposable, and keep migrants legally and statistically invisible. Unable to obtain a legal status, migrants nominally comply with the existing legal framework as they also circumvent and subvert it. The article details the entrenched informal regime of labour migration and explains why recent efforts to ‘legalize’ labour through the introduction of a labour patent (licence), as is the case in Russia, are unlikely to bring in significant reforms.
`In' analytical NoteCentral Asian Survey vol. 33, No.3; Sep.2014: p.346-359
Journal SourceCentral Asian Survey Vol: 33 No 3
Key WordsCommonwealth of Independent States ;  Central Asia ;  Kazakhstan ;  Corruption ;  Labour Migration ;  Legality ;  Informal Networks ;  Migrant Agency ;  Migration Law


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text