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11 - Policy on the ICRMW in the United Kingdom

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 December 2010

Ryszard Cholewinski
Affiliation:
International Organization for Migration, Geneva
Paul de Guchteneire
Affiliation:
UNESCO, Paris
Antoine Pecoud
Affiliation:
UNESCO, Paris
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Summary

Introduction

This chapter reviews the policy debate in the United Kingdom concerning the ICRMW. The first section argues that non-ratification by the United Kingdom is a consequence both of the Convention's implications for immigration policy and of the United Kingdom's desire to avoid international commitments with respect to immigration policy. The second section shows the growth in support for the Convention among trade unions, NGOs, members of parliament and others. One implication is that the Convention has the potential to influence public policy in the United Kingdom, even in the probable absence of ratification.

The migration context in the United Kingdom helps to explain the interest in the Convention. The years after 2000 saw public policy favour inward labour migration at all skill levels and a significant increase in the number of migrant workers actually admitted. The Highly Skilled Migrants Programme, introduced in January 2002 to enable those with high earnings and qualifications to take employment or self-employment, led to over 6,000 successful applications by June 2004. The total number of work permits issued or extended rose from 54,000 in 1997 to a peak of 153,000 in 2003. Quotas for temporary, low-skilled schemes also increased – from roughly 10,000 places in agriculture from 1997 to 2000, to roughly 45,000 places in 2003, made up of 25,000 in agriculture, 10,000 in hospitality and 10,000 in food processing.

Type
Chapter
Information
Migration and Human Rights
The United Nations Convention on Migrant Workers' Rights
, pp. 278 - 294
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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