| Literature DB >> 34367923 |
Nando Sigona1, Jotaro Kato2, Irina Kuznetsova3.
Abstract
The article examines the migration infrastructures and pathways through which migrants move into, through and out of irregular status in Japan and the UK and how these infrastructures uniquely shape their migrant experiences of irregularity at key stages of their migration projects. Our analysis brings together two bodies of migration scholarship, namely critical work on the social and legal production of illegality and the impact of legal violence on the lives of immigrants with precarious legal status, and on the role of migration infrastructures in shaping mobility pathways. Drawing upon in-depth qualitative interviews with irregular and precarious migrants in Japan and the UK collected over a ten-year period, this article develops a three-pronged analysis of the infrastructures of irregularity, focusing on infrastructures of entry, settlement and exit, casting a comparative light on the mechanisms that produce precarious and expendable migrant lives in relation to access to labour and labour conditions, access and quality of housing and law enforcement, and how migrants adapt, cope, resist or eventually are overpowered by them.Entities:
Keywords: Immigration enforcement; Informal labour; Irregular migration; Japan; Migration infrastructure; Migration policy; United Kingdom
Year: 2021 PMID: 34367923 PMCID: PMC8325992 DOI: 10.1186/s40878-021-00242-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Comp Migr Stud ISSN: 2214-594X