Abstract
The main themes of this book, human rights and migration, are both controversial
and in combination even more contested. Migration between
nation-states – or transnational migration – has been restricted by increasingly
complex regulations in many places where people move across borders,
but especially where this occurs from generally poorer to, on average, richer
countries.
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These restrictions have dramatic impacts on the accessibility of
many of the human rights of migrants, yet they are in themselves also a
direct interference with the two most basic rights of migrants: the freedom to
move and the right to have rights. These are not simply interesting theoretical
discussions. Annually many migrants die on their way to their destinations
(Carling, 2007; Nevins, 2007; Hinkes, 2008) or in destitution without safe
access to adequate healthcare (Khosravi, Chapter 3 in this volume). While
working on a European-wide project on trafficking for forced labour the contributors
to this book realized the importance of the wider context of human
rights and migration for the understanding of the exploitation of migrants.
This became apparent in several ways. In multidisciplinary workshops we
problematized the common distinction between ‘deserving’ victims of trafficking
and ‘undeserving’ ‘illegal’ migrants – positioned as having committed
migration crimes. As the Refugee Convention 1951 does not capture all
circumstances under which people are compelled to leave their homes and,
moreover, no human being is illegal, these distinctions do not stand up
against ethical scrutiny. From research on smuggling it became clear, too, that
the distinction between smuggling and trafficking as practices where either
the migrant was ‘guilty’ or the migrant was a ‘victim’ did not coincide
with the stories people told. Instead, many situations were a complex mixture
of decision-making by the migrant and constraints provided by circumstances,
for example openings in migration regimes, law enforcement officials discovering
routes, or the barriers put by other actors in the ‘migration industry’,
such as prices for destinations, violence along the way and connections between facilitators of travel and agents of employment (Khosravi, 2010;
Van Liempt, 2007). Many migrants are grateful to their facilitators, even if
the circumstances on arrival are hard. In most cases trafficked persons do not
at first see themselves as such due to feelings of guilt and responsibility for
decisions made to pursue a risky migration strategy (van den Anker, 2007).
Of course in some cases, especially in trafficking of minors, there may not be
such agency. Interviews with migrants who had their human rights violated
showed that in some cases all three elements of the trafficking definition
were present; that is, recruitment and transportation, force or deception,
and exploitation at the point of arrival. Yet other cases of forced labour and
exploitation where there was no clear link between recruiters and exploiters
were no less unjust (MRCI, 2007). These findings motivated us to attempt
in this book to grasp the complexity of human rights violations of migrants
beyond the niche of narrow conceptions of trafficking.
In the exchange of work at joint workshops and in panels at larger conferences
we further discovered that steps towards increased codification of
migrant rights, better enforcement and more activist claiming of migrant
rights were all limited by the lack of understanding of the barriers to accessibility
of human rights for migrants. The condition of deportability, the xenophobic
environment and the lack of awareness of their rights among migrants
require rethinking of the values underpinning approaches to making migrant
rights accessible. In this book we do this by engaging with migration regimes,
labour rights, human rights, global citizenship and hospitality as arenas of
contest for social change. In the remainder of this introduction we will discuss
the development of the wider debate around trafficking and migrant exploitation
and list the main argument of each chapter.
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