Labour Migration Policy in Russia: Considerations on Governmentality
In: International migration: quarterly review, Band 56, Heft 3, S. 61-72
Abstract
AbstractThe authors argue that Russian migration policy reflects the functioning of contemporary Russia's entire bureaucratic machine. The bureaucracy's Soviet‐era governance techniques on the one hand and the material interests of particular pressure groups on the other, shape the manipulation of immigration regulation that has occurred since the early 2000s. Therefore, attempts to liberalize migration regulation, i.e., to simplify the legalization of foreign workers, have always been incoherent, accompanied by reservations and limitations. Additionally, Russian actions are riddled with conflict between 'geopolitical' and domestic policy rationales. The authorities' occasional attempts to use immigration regulation as a foreign policy tool acquire primarily symbolic value in the 'domestic political market' rather than serving any instrumental purpose. The effort to enhance Russian influence in the post‐Soviet space through the 'reintegration project' (Eurasian Economic Union) collides with the goal of national labour market protection, since integration entails the removal of barriers to labour movement.
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