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Crossing borders: Migration and survival in the capital's informal marketplace

Crossing borders: Migration and survival in the capital's informal marketplace
Crossing borders: Migration and survival in the capital's informal marketplace
Major discourses on UK migration tend to be framed by simplistic dichotomies which currently inform policy, media, and public debates: migrants as parasites or providers, exploiters or exploited, victims or criminals. However, our ongoing ethnographic research amongst post-communist populations (PCPs), in particular those from the accession and new accession states such as Lithuania, Poland, Romania, etc., and London's informal and criminal economies reveals a more complex and worrying set of realities. Static boundaries are more or less non-existent as many migrants find themselves, for myriad reasons, constantly traversing the borders between the capital's formal, informal, and criminal markets. This, in turn, requires a constant shifting of identity and status as a means of successfully negotiating passage back and forth across these economic margins. These fluctuations present a challenge to the various agencies within criminal justice and the third sector whose competing agendas are largely based on stable categorisations of migrants.
6-7
Rawlinson, P.
08f032c7-d8a0-40ec-99f0-c13132d0bdf8
Fussey, P.
1553072f-da89-4ff8-963c-deb7bfd65c4f
Rawlinson, P.
08f032c7-d8a0-40ec-99f0-c13132d0bdf8
Fussey, P.
1553072f-da89-4ff8-963c-deb7bfd65c4f

Rawlinson, P. and Fussey, P. (2010) Crossing borders: Migration and survival in the capital's informal marketplace. Criminal Justice Matters, 79 (10), 6-7. (doi:10.1080/09627250903569858).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Major discourses on UK migration tend to be framed by simplistic dichotomies which currently inform policy, media, and public debates: migrants as parasites or providers, exploiters or exploited, victims or criminals. However, our ongoing ethnographic research amongst post-communist populations (PCPs), in particular those from the accession and new accession states such as Lithuania, Poland, Romania, etc., and London's informal and criminal economies reveals a more complex and worrying set of realities. Static boundaries are more or less non-existent as many migrants find themselves, for myriad reasons, constantly traversing the borders between the capital's formal, informal, and criminal markets. This, in turn, requires a constant shifting of identity and status as a means of successfully negotiating passage back and forth across these economic margins. These fluctuations present a challenge to the various agencies within criminal justice and the third sector whose competing agendas are largely based on stable categorisations of migrants.

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Published date: 10 March 2010

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 495059
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495059
PURE UUID: 84559870-6ad1-44ba-b928-b43a2e993d57
ORCID for P. Fussey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1374-7133

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Date deposited: 28 Oct 2024 17:54
Last modified: 29 Oct 2024 03:13

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Contributors

Author: P. Rawlinson
Author: P. Fussey ORCID iD

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