The Perils of Highly-Skilled Mobility: Welfare Risk and Temporary Migration from the Nordic Region to India

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The Perils of Highly-Skilled Mobility : Welfare Risk and Temporary Migration from the Nordic Region to India. / Foulkes, Nicol Marie .

In: Journal of Finnish Studies, Vol. 17, No. 1/2, 2014, p. 199-224.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Foulkes, NM 2014, 'The Perils of Highly-Skilled Mobility: Welfare Risk and Temporary Migration from the Nordic Region to India', Journal of Finnish Studies, vol. 17, no. 1/2, pp. 199-224.

APA

Foulkes, N. M. (2014). The Perils of Highly-Skilled Mobility: Welfare Risk and Temporary Migration from the Nordic Region to India. Journal of Finnish Studies, 17(1/2), 199-224.

Vancouver

Foulkes NM. The Perils of Highly-Skilled Mobility: Welfare Risk and Temporary Migration from the Nordic Region to India. Journal of Finnish Studies. 2014;17(1/2):199-224.

Author

Foulkes, Nicol Marie . / The Perils of Highly-Skilled Mobility : Welfare Risk and Temporary Migration from the Nordic Region to India. In: Journal of Finnish Studies. 2014 ; Vol. 17, No. 1/2. pp. 199-224.

Bibtex

@article{9c42c93a8f934aa5a843c8145a6616fd,
title = "The Perils of Highly-Skilled Mobility: Welfare Risk and Temporary Migration from the Nordic Region to India",
abstract = "European welfare states were founded on the assumption that citizens who were in need of welfare protection were resident within the national territorial boundaries. Nowadays, it is not uncommon for jobs to be carried out, wholly or in part, abroad. Citizens and residents incur new social risks as their social and political rights in their home country often diminish as a result of the move. One example of this is when European firms send employees from European offices abroad to complete work assignments, namely international secondment. Taking the example of secondment to India, this paper investigates to what extent both the employee and their accompanying partners{\textquoteright} social rights are protected when they move outside of the territory of the EU and the EEA away from their country of usual residence, Denmark and Finland. This study is an analysis of how the social rights of seconded employees and their dependents, considered to be privileged migrants, are protected by the state by comparing the pre-conditions for entitlement to basic social security while abroad. As well as illuminating the extent of their dependency on the company and the market for social protection, the findings indicate that temporary migrants incur new social risks albeit to varying extents depending on the country of origin, their labour market activity, and the conditions of the contract of employment with the sending company. ",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, social risk, Nordic welfare state, highly skilled migration, mobility",
author = "Foulkes, {Nicol Marie}",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "199--224",
journal = "Journal of Finnish Studies",
issn = "1206-6516",
publisher = "University of Toronto Finnish Studies Program",
number = "1/2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Perils of Highly-Skilled Mobility

T2 - Welfare Risk and Temporary Migration from the Nordic Region to India

AU - Foulkes, Nicol Marie

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - European welfare states were founded on the assumption that citizens who were in need of welfare protection were resident within the national territorial boundaries. Nowadays, it is not uncommon for jobs to be carried out, wholly or in part, abroad. Citizens and residents incur new social risks as their social and political rights in their home country often diminish as a result of the move. One example of this is when European firms send employees from European offices abroad to complete work assignments, namely international secondment. Taking the example of secondment to India, this paper investigates to what extent both the employee and their accompanying partners’ social rights are protected when they move outside of the territory of the EU and the EEA away from their country of usual residence, Denmark and Finland. This study is an analysis of how the social rights of seconded employees and their dependents, considered to be privileged migrants, are protected by the state by comparing the pre-conditions for entitlement to basic social security while abroad. As well as illuminating the extent of their dependency on the company and the market for social protection, the findings indicate that temporary migrants incur new social risks albeit to varying extents depending on the country of origin, their labour market activity, and the conditions of the contract of employment with the sending company.

AB - European welfare states were founded on the assumption that citizens who were in need of welfare protection were resident within the national territorial boundaries. Nowadays, it is not uncommon for jobs to be carried out, wholly or in part, abroad. Citizens and residents incur new social risks as their social and political rights in their home country often diminish as a result of the move. One example of this is when European firms send employees from European offices abroad to complete work assignments, namely international secondment. Taking the example of secondment to India, this paper investigates to what extent both the employee and their accompanying partners’ social rights are protected when they move outside of the territory of the EU and the EEA away from their country of usual residence, Denmark and Finland. This study is an analysis of how the social rights of seconded employees and their dependents, considered to be privileged migrants, are protected by the state by comparing the pre-conditions for entitlement to basic social security while abroad. As well as illuminating the extent of their dependency on the company and the market for social protection, the findings indicate that temporary migrants incur new social risks albeit to varying extents depending on the country of origin, their labour market activity, and the conditions of the contract of employment with the sending company.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - social risk, Nordic welfare state, highly skilled migration, mobility

M3 - Journal article

VL - 17

SP - 199

EP - 224

JO - Journal of Finnish Studies

JF - Journal of Finnish Studies

SN - 1206-6516

IS - 1/2

ER -

ID: 140387720