Our paper focuses on the socio-economic and the legal/institutional characteristics of international migrants’ incorporation into the Italian labour market. Our interpretation of the statistical evidence available with respect to immigrant’s labour insertion combines the role played by the local characteristics of labour force demand, the normative constraints generated by immigration policies —and more broadly by the institutional framework which organises economic relationships— and the role performed by migrants network. The second part of the paper will focus on Indian immigration in the province of Cremona with a twofold objective. On the one hand, it will show how the “productive vocation” of the Cremona Province, together with the role played by social and economic actors and the institutional/regulatory framework, has had a crucial influence on the methods through which Indian citizens residing in that area have entered the workforce and to generate the local socio-economic arrangements which accompany immigrants settlement. On the other hand, it will reveal how Sikhs represent a deviant case compared to the salient characteristics of migrants’ descriptive labour insertion models discussed in the first part.
Compiani, M., Quassoli, F. (2005). The milky way to labour market insertion: the Sikh “community” in Lombardy. In E. Spaan, F. Hillmann, T. Van Naerssen (a cura di), Asian Migrants and European Labour Markets: Patterns and Processes of Immigrant Labour Market Insertion in Europe (pp. 138-158). London : Routledge.
The milky way to labour market insertion: the Sikh “community” in Lombardy
QUASSOLI, FABIO
2005
Abstract
Our paper focuses on the socio-economic and the legal/institutional characteristics of international migrants’ incorporation into the Italian labour market. Our interpretation of the statistical evidence available with respect to immigrant’s labour insertion combines the role played by the local characteristics of labour force demand, the normative constraints generated by immigration policies —and more broadly by the institutional framework which organises economic relationships— and the role performed by migrants network. The second part of the paper will focus on Indian immigration in the province of Cremona with a twofold objective. On the one hand, it will show how the “productive vocation” of the Cremona Province, together with the role played by social and economic actors and the institutional/regulatory framework, has had a crucial influence on the methods through which Indian citizens residing in that area have entered the workforce and to generate the local socio-economic arrangements which accompany immigrants settlement. On the other hand, it will reveal how Sikhs represent a deviant case compared to the salient characteristics of migrants’ descriptive labour insertion models discussed in the first part.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.