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Session Submission Type: Paper Session (90 minute)
This panel examines labor differentiation within mobility regimes through a political economy and world-system lens. Papers in this session analyze how states respond to demands and changes in global capital—such as decarbonization, import competition, migration—through case studies from China, South Korea, the Caribbean, United States, Germany, and Costa Rica. They highlight how global capital accumulation has informed and structured migration, citizenship, and labor regimes and how those impacted respond to this differentiation.
Hollowing Out or Competitive Upgrading? China Shock and Informal Economy in Advanced and Developing Economies - Ang Li, Brown University; Anthony Roberts, Colorado State University
Migrant Workers, Split Labor Markets, and Racial Conflicts in South Korea’s Shipyards - Minhyoung Kang, Korea University; Taejeong Lee; Woosik Kim, Korean Metal Workers’ Union Research Center
Seeing Like an (undocumented) Immigrant Understanding Borders and Migration from the Migrant Perspective - Salvador Rangel, Swarthmore College
Smelling like a Market: Investment Migration, Cunning States, and the Coloniality of Citizenship in the Caribbean - Manuela Boatca, Freiburg University
Who Counts as Skilled? Comparative Perspectives on High-Tech Migration and Labor Market Stratification - Daniela Mia Campos Ugaz, Emory University