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1

Consultation with the UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights of Migrants (2002 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia). Annual Consultation with the UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights of Migrants with Asian migrant organizations & migrant support organizations: Report, June 2-3, 2002, Kuala Lumpur. CARAM-Asia, 2003.

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2

Assembly, International Social Security Association General. Pension rights for migrant workers. International Social Security Association, 1993.

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3

Hotline for migrant workers (Israel). For we are strangers: Hotline for migrant workers, a decade of activism for migrants' rights. Hotline for migrant workers, 2009.

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4

1942-, Iyer K. Gopal, ed. Migrant labour and human rights in India. Kanishka Publishers, Distributors, 2003.

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5

Churches' Committee for Migrants in Europe. Proclaiming migrants rights: The new International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families. World Council of Churches/CICARWS, Migration Secretariat, 1991.

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6

Castañeda, Alejandra. The politics of citizenship of Mexican migrants. LFB Scholarly Pub., 2006.

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7

K, Gopal Iyer, and India. National Human Rights Commission., eds. Distressed migrant labour in India: Key human rights issues. Kanishka Publishers Distributors, 2004.

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8

Ghosh, Bimal. Elusive protection, uncertain lands: Migrants' access to human rights. International Organization for Migration, 2003.

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9

(Organization), Human Rights Watch. Rights on the line: Human Rights Watch work on abuses against migrants in 2010. Human Rights Watch, 2010.

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10

Arnold, Dennis. Capital expansion and migrant workers: Flexible labor in the Thai-Burma border economy. Office of Human Rights Studies and Social Development, Faculty of Graduate Studies, Mahidol University, 2007.

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11

Goldman, Christopher Holliday. Human rights and the migratory labour system. Human Rights Project, Institute of Southern African Studies, National University of Lesotho, 1988.

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12

Goldman, Christopher Holliday. Human rights and the migratory labour system. Institute of Southern African Studies, National University of Lesotho, 1987.

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13

Kathmandu, Nepal) International Conference on Cooperation between NHRIs for the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights of the Migrant Workers (2012. International Conference on the Rights of Migrant Workers: Nov 26-27, 2012, Kathmandu. National Human Rights Commission of Nepal, 2012.

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14

National Human Rights Commission (Nepal), ed. Human rights situation of Nepalese migrant workers: Observation and monitoring report, South Korea and Malaysia (30th August to 7 September, 2013) / report prepared by Sadhana Ghimire. National Human Rights Commission, Nepal, 2013.

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15

Center for Migrant Advocacy Philippines., ed. Protection of the rights of migrant workers and the role of trade unions in labor-sending and receiving countries. Center for Migrant Advocacy Philippines, 2005.

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16

Fred, Abrahams, Gorvin Ian, and Human Rights Watch (Organization), eds. Stemming the flow: Abuses against migrants, asylum seekers and refugees. Human Rights Watch, 2006.

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17

Office, International Labour, ed. The Rights of migrant workers: A guide to ILO standards for the use of migrant workers and their organisations. International Labour Office, 1986.

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18

Lorena, González de Volio, and Inter-American Institute of Human Rights., eds. Ombudsman y derechos humanos de las personas migrantes: Procuradurías y defensorías de derechos humanos de Centroamérica. IIDH, 2002.

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19

Min, Aung Myo, and Aung Myo Min. Cycle of suffering: A report on the situation for migrant women workers from Burma in Thailand, and violations of their human rights. Human Rights Documentation Unit, Burmese Women's Union, 2000.

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20

Manajit, Suchita, Thi Thanh Nga Na Mai, and Andy Hall. Migrant workers' rights to social protection in ASEAN: Case studies of Indonesia, Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand. Migrant Forum in Asia, 2011.

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21

Coin, Francesca. Keep the Union at Bay. Edizioni Ca' Foscari, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-222-2.

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In the United States, farm-workers are traditionally excluded from the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and from the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) which guarantee basic rights to workers, including the right to organize and engage in collective bargaining. In a sense, farm-workers are confined to a secondary market characterized by substandard wages and labor conditions. This study explores how migrant farm-workers in North Carolina have responded to their labor conditions with a campaign that culminated in the achievement of the first labor contract for guest-workers in US history. Based
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22

author, Kharche Jayshree V., ed. Child labour and right issues: A study of migrant labourers. Discovery Publishing House Pvt. Ltd., 2014.

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23

Varia, Nisha. Singapore: Maid to order: ending abuses against migrant domestic workers in Singapore. Human Rights Watch, 2005.

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24

Center for Migrant Advocacy Philippines., ed. The ASEAN declaration for the protection and promotion of the rights of migrant workers: What's next? Center for Migrant Advocacy Philippines, 2007.

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25

Padilla-Rodriguez, Ivon. Undocumented Youth: The Labor, Education, and Rights of Migrant Children in Twentieth Century America. [publisher not identified], 2021.

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26

Secretariat, Amnesty International International, ed. Living in the shadows: A primer on the human rights of migrants. Amnesty International, International Secretariat, 2006.

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27

Su, Yingyu. Cheng zhen hua yu nü xing nong min gong lao dong quan yi bao zhang: Ji yu Makesi zhu yi lao dong guan shi yu de si kao = The study on labor rights of female migrant workers in the process of urbanization. She hui ke xue wen xian chu ban she, 2018.

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28

Camejo, Mary Jane. Harvesting oppression: Forced Haitian labor in the Dominican sugar industry. National Coalition for Haitian Refugees, 1990.

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29

Meier-Schatz, Lucrezia. L' église, la démocratie chrétienne et les droits de l'homme des travailleurs migrants. Editions universitaires, 1989.

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30

Calleros, Juan Carlos. El Instituto Nacional de Migración y los derechos humanos de los migrantes en México. SEGOB, Instituto Nacional de Migración, Centro de Estudios Migratorios, 2009.

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31

McGeehan, Nicholas. Migrant workers' rights on Saadiyat Island in the United Arab Emirates: 2015 Progress Report. Human Rights Watch, 2015.

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32

Begum, Rothna. "I already bought you": Abuse and exploitation of female migrant domestic workers in the United Arab Emirates. Human Rights Watch, 2014.

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33

Administrative Commission of the European Communities on Social Security for Migrant Workers., ed. Your social security rights when moving within the European Union: A practical guide. Office for Official Publications of the European Communities, 1997.

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34

Rư̄ankǣo, Phatthayā. Rāingān kānsưksā wičhai sitthi ying Thai kō̜ranī khlư̄anyāi rǣngngān khām chāt. Khana Kammakān Sitthi Manutsayachon hǣng Chāt, 2009.

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35

Amnesty International. People's Republic of China: Internal migrants : discrimination and abuse : the human cost of an economic 'miracle'. International Secretariat, 2007.

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36

Americas Watch Committee (U.S.), National Coalition for Haitian Refugees, Caribbean Rights (Organization), and Human Rights Watch (Organization), eds. Harvesting oppression: Forced Haitian labor in the Dominican sugar industry. Americas Watch, 1990.

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37

United Nations. Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean and Conferencia Hemisférica sobre Migración Internacional: Derechos Humanos y Trata de Personas en las Américas (2002 : Santiago de Chile), eds. Human rights and trafficking in persons in the Americas: Summary and highlights of the Hemispheric Conference on International Migration. ECLAC, 2004.

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38

Office, International Labour, ed. International labour standards on migrant workers' rights: Guide for policymakers and practitioners in Asia and the Pacific. International Labour Office, 2008.

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39

Mostofi, Mani. For a better life: Migrant worker abuse in Bahrain and the government reform agenda. Human Rights Watch, 2012.

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40

Martin, Philip. Regulating Recruiters. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198808022.003.0007.

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This chapter outlines the major International Labor Organization and UN conventions that protect migrant workers, contrasts the efforts to reduce the cost of remitting small sums over national borders with those to reduce what workers pay to recruiters, and discusses the trade-off between the number of low-skilled migrants a country sends abroad and the rights enjoyed by these migrants. The migrant numbers–rights trade-off is straightforward but often misunderstood. Some rights have costs, including the right to work-related and general welfare benefits. If migrant-sending countries insist tha
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41

Allegro, Linda. On Removing Migrant Labor in a Right-to-Work State. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037665.003.0006.

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This chapter explores the anti-immigrant bill known as The Oklahoma Taxpayer and Citizen Protection Act (HB 1804), which sought to criminalize undocumented labor after a decade-long corporate recruitment strategy that solicited migrant labor under the premise of right-to-work. Of particular interest is the emphasis on the weak policy controls the legislation placed on employers while disproportionately penalizing migrants and their families. In this way it disentangles the inconsistent position of the “anti-illegals” narrative that espouses draconian measures penalizing undocumented migrants b
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42

Martin, Philip. International Labor Migration. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198808022.003.0002.

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Migration is the exception rather than the rule, but international labor migration is likely to increase because of persisting demographic and economic inequalities at a time when revolutions in communications, transportation, and rights make it ever easier to learn about opportunities abroad, move to them, and stay abroad. When faced with migration crises, the default management tool of governments involves adjusting the rights of migrants, prompting clashes with UN agencies and non-governmental organizations that urge equal rights for migrants. In an ideal world, there would be few barriers
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43

Forlorn migrants: An international legal regime for undocumented migrant workers. University Press, 2000.

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44

Hallett, Miranda Cady. Rooted/Uprooted. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037665.003.0007.

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This chapter asks what happens when transnational migrant families own homes, plant trees, and establish businesses in small-town America but still lack a viable path to legal residency. Based on extensive fieldwork in small, rural Arkansas communities with Salvadoran transnational migrants, the author explores the contradictory dynamics between a growing identification with local geographies and continuing legal exclusion. Most Salvadoran migrants are caught between categories of national belonging; classified as either “illegal” or “temporary,” they lack rights to political participation eit
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45

International labour migration: A rights-based approach. International Labour Office, 2010.

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46

Mattern, Joanne. Cesar Chavez: Labor Rights Activist. Cavendish Square Publishing LLC, 2019.

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47

Mattern, Joanne. Cesar Chavez: Labor Rights Activist. Cavendish Square Publishing LLC, 2019.

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48

Mattern, Joanne. Cesar Chavez: Labor Rights Activist. Cavendish Square Publishing LLC, 2019.

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49

Délano Alonso, Alexandra. Integration through Ventanillas de Salud and Plazas Comunitarias. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190688578.003.0003.

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This chapter presents empirical evidence of origin-country diaspora programs with a focus on immigrant integration. It draws from examples of programs focused on education, health, financial literacy, and labor rights, carried out mainly by Mexico throughout its consular network in the United States. Through interviews, it examines the ways in which these programs have emerged and evolved, emphasizing the coalitions formed among consulates, public and private institutions in the United States, and migrant organizations. Through relationships of trust established through consulates, migrants an
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50

Wagenaar, Hendrik, Helga Amesberger, and Sietske Altink. Understanding the policy field: migration, prostitution, trafficking and exploitation. Policy Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447324249.003.0005.

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Chapter Five proceeds from to the transnational character of prostitution and situates it in an analysis of labour migration and labour exploitation. Instead of projecting on the migrant sex worker the collective images that are driven by radical feminist and anti-immigrant ideology, we argue that is it more effective to take seriously what the sex workers told us over and over again: that the migrant sex worker’s self-understanding of prostitution is work, a discerning occupational choice in a situation in which thousands of female migrants find themselves worldwide. This reframing of prostit
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