Full-text resources of CEJSH and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

PL EN


2015 | 4 | 2 | 87-105

Article title

Female Migrants’ Work Trajectories: Polish Women in the UK Labour Market

Authors

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
The present paper examines how, at a time of post EU-enlargement migration, female Polish migrants in the UK act within, despite and against the social structure of gender regimes in the origin and host societies and how female migrant agents are actively mediating structures in a quest to fulfil their aspirations. Biographical narrative interviews conducted with female Polish migrant workers in the UK and semi-structured expert interviews provide the empirical data for the analysis of how employment trajectories in migration can challenge or reinforce gender roles, and of the role of female migrants’ agency. The paper shows how some women are limited in their opportunities by gender roles and familial obligations, while others are able to progress professionally either by entering a typical ‘migrant’ sector, by undertaking UK education, or by starting their own businesses, challenging the gendered expectations they face. The paper thus contributes to the discussion on female migrants as disadvantaged migrant workers or as active agents of change.

Contributors

author

References

  • Anacka M., Matejko E., Nestorowicz J. (2013). Ready to Move. Liquid Return to Poland, in: B. Glorius, I. Grabowska-Lusińska, A. Kuvik (eds), Mobility in Transition. Migration Patterns after EU Enlargement, pp. 277–307. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
  • Anderson B. (2000). Doing the Dirty Work? The Global Politics of Domestic Labour. New York, London: Zed Books.
  • Apitzsch U., Siouti I. (2007). Biographical Analysis as an Interdisciplinary Research Perspective in the Field of Migration Studies. Frankfurt am Main: Johann Wolfgang Goethe Universität.
  • Aufhauser E. (2000). Migration und Geschlecht: Zur Konstruktion und Rekonstruktion von Weiblichkeit und Männlichkeit in der internationalen Migration, in: K. Husa, C. Parnreiter, I. Stacher (eds), Internationale Migration: Die globale Herausforderung des 21. Jahrhunderts?, pp. 97–122. Frankfurt am Main: Brandes und Apsel, Wien: Südwind.
  • Booth R. (2013). Polish Becomes England’s Second Language. The Guardian, 30 January, www.guardian.co.uk (accessed: 15 April 2015).
  • Burrell K. (ed.) (2009). Polish Migration to the UK in the ‘New’ European Union: After 2004. Surrey: Ashgate.
  • Burrell K. (2010). Staying, Returning, Working and Living: Key Themes in Current Academic Research Undertaken in the UK on Migration Movements from Eastern Europe. Social Identities 16(3): 297-308.
  • Charmaz K. (2006). Constructing Grounded Theory: A Practical Guide through Qualitative Analysis. London: Sage.
  • Cieślik A. (2011). Where Do You Prefer to Work? How the Work Environment Influences Return Migration Decisions from the United Kingdom to Poland. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 37(9): 1367–1383.
  • Cook J., Dwyer P., Waite L. (2010). The Experiences of Accession 8 Migrants in England: Motivations, Work and Agency. International Migration 49(2): 54–79.
  • Coyle A. (2007). Resistance, Regulation and Rights. The Changing Status of Polish Women’s Migration and Work in the ‘New’ Europe. European Journal of Women’s Studies 14(1): 37–50.
  • Cyrus N. (2008). Managing a Mobile Life: Changing Attitudes among Illegally Employed Polish Household Workers in Berlin, in: S. Metz-Göckel, M. Morokvasić, A. S. Münst (eds), Migration and Mobility in an Enlarged Europe: A Gender Perspective, pp. 179–202. Opladen: Barbara Budrich.
  • Drinkwater S., Eade J., Garapich M. (2006). Poles Apart? EU Enlargement and the Labour Market Outcomes of Immigrants in the UK. IZA Discussion Paper 2410. Bonn: IZA.
  • Duda-Mikulin E. (2013). Citizenship in Action? A Case Study of Polish Migrant Women Moving between Poland and the UK. Kultura i Edukacja 6(99): 205–224.
  • Eade J., Drinkwater S., Garapich M. P. (2006). Polscy migranci w Londynie – klasa społeczna i etniczność. Surrey: Economic and Social Research Council.
  • Frattini T. (2014). Moving up the Ladder? Labor Market Outcomes in the United Kingdom amid Rising Immigration. Washington DC and Geneva: Migration Policy Institute, International Labour Organisation.
  • Fuszara M. (2014). Der Streit um ‘Gender’ und seine polnische Spezifik. Polen-Analysen 142, 1 April 2014. Online: http://www.bpb.de/internationales/europa/polen/181932/analyse-der-streit-um-gender-und-seine-polnische-spezifik (accessed: 15 April 2015).
  • Galasińska A., Kozłowska O. (2009). Discourses on a ‘Normal Life’ among Post-Accession Migrants from Poland to Britain, in: K. Burrell (ed.), Polish Migration to the UK in the ‘New’ European Union: After 2004, pp. 87–105. Farnham: Ashgate.
  • Glaser B. G., Strauss A. L. (1968). The Discovery of Grounded Theory: Strategies for Qualitative Research. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
  • Grabowska-Lusińska I. (2012). Migrantów ścieżki zawodowe bez granic. Warszawa: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Scholar.
  • Grabowska-Lusińska I., Jaźwińska-Motylska E. (2013). Znaczenie migracji w życiu zawodowym kobiet i mężczyzn. Kultura i społeczeństwo 3: 85–108.
  • Graff A. (2006). Warum Frauen in Polen ‘nicht stören’, in: Jahrbuch Polen 2006 Frauen, pp. 34–44. Wiesbaden: Deutsches Polen-Institut, Harrassowitz Verlag.
  • Ignatowicz A. M. (2012). Migration and Mobility of New Polish Migrants in England: Narratives of Lived Experience. PhD thesis, Aston University.
  • Janion M. (1996). Kobiety i duch inności. Warszawa: Wydawnictwo Sic!.
  • Kaźmierska K., Piotrowski A., Waniek K. (2011). Biographical Consequences of Working Abroad in the Context of European Mental Space Construction. Przegląd Socjologiczny 60(1): 139–158.
  • Kofman E. (2004). Family-Related Migration: A Critical Review of European Studies. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 30(2): 243–262.
  • Kofman E., Phizacklea A., Raghuram P., Sales R. (2000). Gender and International Migration in Europe: Employment, Welfare and Politics. London: Routledge.
  • Lopez Rodriguez M. (2010). Migration and a Quest for ‘Normalcy’. Polish Migrant Mothers and the Capitalization of Meritocratic Opportunities in the UK. Social Identities 16(3): 339–358.
  • McCall L. (2005). The Complexity of Intersectionality. Journal of Women in Culture and Society 30(3): 1771–1800.
  • Migration Observatory (2012). Pole Position – New Census Data Shows Ten-Fold Growth of England and Wales’ Polish Population. Migration Observatory commentary. Oxford: COMPAS, Oxford University.
  • Moch L. P. (2005). Gender and Migration Research, in: M. Bommes, E. Morawska (eds), International Migration Research. Constructions, Omissions and the Promise of Interdisciplinarity, pp. 95–108. Aldershot: Ashgate.
  • Morawska E. (1985). For Bread and Butter: Life-Worlds of Peasant-Immigrants from East Central Europeans in Johnstown, Pennsylvania 1890–1940. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • Morokvasić M. (1984). Birds of Passage are also Women. International Migration Review 18(4): 886–907.
  • Morokvasić M., Münst A. S., Metz-Göckel L. (eds) (2008). Migration and Mobility in an Enlarged Europe. A Gender Perspective. Opladen: Barbara Budrich.
  • Petrowa-Wasilewicz A. (2006). Denkmal der unbekannten Köchin oder braucht Polen den Feminismus?, in: Jahrbuch Polen 2006 Frauen, pp. 52–59. Wiesbaden: Deutsches Polen-Institut, Harrassowitz Verlag.
  • Pickhan G. (2006). Frauenrollen, Geschlechterdifferenz und Nation-Building in der Geschichte Polens, in: Jahrbuch Polen 2006 Frauen, pp. 7–18. Wiesbaden: Deutsches Polen-Institut, Harrassowitz Verlag.
  • Rabikowska M. (2010). Negotiation of Normality and Identity among Migrants from Eastern Europe to the United Kingdom after 2004. Social Identities 16(3): 285–296.
  • Rienzo C., Vargas-Silva C. (2012). Migrants in the UK: An Overview. Migration Observatory briefing. Oxford: COMPAS, University of Oxford.
  • Schütze F. (1983). Biographieforschung und narratives Interview. Neue Praxis 13(3): 283–293.
  • Slany K. (2008). Female Migration from Central-Eastern Europe: Demographics and Sociological Aspects, in: M. Morokvasić, A. S. Münst, L. Metz-Göckel (eds), Migration and Mobility in an Enlarged Europe. A Gender Perspective, pp. 27–51. Opladen: Barbara Budrich.
  • White A. (2010). Young People and Migration from Contemporary Poland. Journal of Youth Studies 13(5): 565–580.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.oai-journals-pan-pl-117552
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.