2016
DOI: 10.1080/1369183x.2016.1200966
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Living within temporally thick borders: IT professionals’ experiences of Swedish immigration policy and practice

Abstract: This paper challenges the claim that highly skilled professionals are offered almost seamless mobility and a comprehensive set of rights. Focussing on highly skilled professionals in Sweden's information technology industry, it argues that just like the lower skilled, the highly skilled may experience a range of insecurities to do with their immigration status. It explores these insecurities by conceptualising border crossing as a temporal process that begins with the submission of a work permit application an… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

1
33
0
1

Year Published

2017
2017
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
7
1

Relationship

1
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 34 publications
(35 citation statements)
references
References 38 publications
1
33
0
1
Order By: Relevance
“…This is despite a concurrent growing interest in temporality in migration studies (Cojocaru 2016;Griffiths et al 2013;Marcu 2017;Meeus 2012), which has recently challenged the primarily spatial orientations of much of the early work on migrant transnationalism. Yet, despite a growing body of work that seeks to understand migrant temporalities, the focus has mostly been on 'liminal' or 'suspended' time, for example how 'waiting' is experienced by asylum seekers and displaced people (Conlon 2011;Griffiths 2014) or on the temporalities of migrant labour and how temporal borders affect the mobilities of migrants as workers (Ahmad 2008;Axelsson 2017). The literatures on migrant intimacies and migrant temporalities, however, are yet to intersect comprehensively.…”
Section: Intimate 'Chronomobilities': Intimate Relationships Middlinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is despite a concurrent growing interest in temporality in migration studies (Cojocaru 2016;Griffiths et al 2013;Marcu 2017;Meeus 2012), which has recently challenged the primarily spatial orientations of much of the early work on migrant transnationalism. Yet, despite a growing body of work that seeks to understand migrant temporalities, the focus has mostly been on 'liminal' or 'suspended' time, for example how 'waiting' is experienced by asylum seekers and displaced people (Conlon 2011;Griffiths 2014) or on the temporalities of migrant labour and how temporal borders affect the mobilities of migrants as workers (Ahmad 2008;Axelsson 2017). The literatures on migrant intimacies and migrant temporalities, however, are yet to intersect comprehensively.…”
Section: Intimate 'Chronomobilities': Intimate Relationships Middlinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While previous research has tended to assert that highly skilled migrants can choose freely where in the world they want to live and work and therefore have no desire to obtain permanent status (Koser and Salt, 1997;Kõu and Bailey, 2014), the argument is somewhat overgeneralised. For even a temporary delay of full access to rights may result in a range of insecurities for skilled professionals who are granted access to a given territory on a visa that makes them eligible to apply for settlement only after they have worked in the host country for a certain length of time (Axelsson, 2017). Just like the restaurant workers in Sweden, skilled and highly skilled professionals who enter the UK on a Tier 2 (General) visa; a visa that makes it possible to apply for permanent status after five years of working in the UK, for example, are required to work only in the role specified in their visa and for the employer that has sponsored their application until they, if they still meet all requirements, are granted permanent status.…”
Section: Suspended Inclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By the 1990s, the career progression of non-European Economic Area medical migrants was limited by those time limits as their three-year visas made it impossible to complete the five years of training required to reach a consultant grade. At times, the suspension of freedom of movement comes at great personal cost, for example when migrants are unable to return home for family emergencies (Axelsson, 2017).…”
Section: Suspended Inclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By examining the employment outcomes of non-EU 1 graduates from Swiss Higher Education (HE) institutions, we are able to reveal that the influence of educational credentials on their subsequent lifecourse is mediated by events in other life spheres (Levy and Widmer 2013a). Using a gender-sensitive approach, we analyse the effects of legal barriers (Axelsson 2016;Hawthorne 2014;Raghuram 2008;Shinozaki 2017) and family dynamics (Geddie 2013;Phan et al 2015;Raghuram 2004Raghuram , 2008Schaer et al 2016a) on the employment trajectories of migrant graduates.…”
Section: Abstract Separated By ' -'mentioning
confidence: 99%