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dc.contributor.authorLillie, Nathan
dc.date.accessioned2016-04-13T11:30:50Z
dc.date.available2017-02-14T22:45:06Z
dc.date.issued2016
dc.identifier.citationLillie, N. (2016). The Right Not to Have Rights: Posted Worker Acquiescence and the European Union Labor Rights Framework. <i>Theoretical Inquiries in Law</i>, <i>17</i>(1), 39-62. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1515/til-2016-0003" target="_blank">https://doi.org/10.1515/til-2016-0003</a>
dc.identifier.otherCONVID_25498670
dc.identifier.otherTUTKAID_68912
dc.identifier.urihttps://jyx.jyu.fi/handle/123456789/49327
dc.description.abstractThe emergence of the European Union citizenship agenda has mainly taken place along the evolution of mobility rights, with the goal of creating a pan-European labor market. Mobility undermines the nationally embedded notion of industrial citizenship. Industrial citizenship protects workers’ rights and secures their participation in national political systems. The Europeanization of labor markets severs the relationship between state, territory and citizen on which industrial citizenship has been built, undermining worker collectivism and access to representation. This is legitimated in terms of building market-citizenship, i.e., enabling mobile workers as market actors. However, the way mobility is regulated in the EU has the purpose and effect of weakening collective labor institutions, which also undermines workers’ ability to act as autonomous market actors. The same factors which undermine the industrial citizenship of mobile workers also prevent them from being effective free market agents: i.e., they can neither negotiate nor enforce individual contracts effectively in the face of systematic employer fraud and wage theft. The “Arendtian dilemma” of the “right to have rights” — a dilemma that derives from the claim that rights depend on the existence of a political community, which until now is the territorially exclusive nation-state, rather than universal personhood — emerges as industrial citizenship is internationalized. By disembeddeding workers from host-country industrial relations systems, EU regulation provides the social context in which workers’ rights become alienable.
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherWalter de Gruyter GmbH
dc.relation.ispartofseriesTheoretical Inquiries in Law
dc.subject.otherEuropean union
dc.subject.otherLabor rights
dc.titleThe Right Not to Have Rights: Posted Worker Acquiescence and the European Union Labor Rights Framework
dc.typearticle
dc.identifier.urnURN:NBN:fi:jyu-201601291331
dc.contributor.laitosYhteiskuntatieteiden ja filosofian laitosfi
dc.contributor.laitosDepartment of Social Sciences and Philosophyen
dc.contributor.oppiaineYhteiskuntapolitiikkafi
dc.contributor.oppiaineSocial and Public Policyen
dc.type.urihttp://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticle
dc.date.updated2016-01-29T10:15:07Z
dc.type.coarhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_2df8fbb1
dc.description.reviewstatuspeerReviewed
dc.format.pagerange39-62
dc.relation.issn1565-1509
dc.relation.numberinseries1
dc.relation.volume17
dc.type.versionpublishedVersion
dc.rights.copyright© Walter de Gruyter GmbH, 2016. Published in this repository with the kind permission of the publisher.
dc.rights.accesslevelopenAccessfi
dc.subject.ysotyö
jyx.subject.urihttp://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p1810
dc.relation.doi10.1515/til-2016-0003
dc.type.okmA1


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