Skip to main content
Rebordering Britain & Britons after Brexit

'They laughed at me, but I left that job': occupational agency of Latvian migrant workers in the United Kingdom

Abstract

This article focuses on migrants' occupational agency in the UK labour market. In particular, the article explores the experience of Latvian migrant workers who together with other Baltic and Central European migrants have filled the low-skilled and low-paid employment sectors in the UK. The article follows a realist approach that provides different conceptual layers to better explain occupational agency. Drawing on survey data and semi-structured interviews, the article demonstrates how Latvians have exercised their occupational agency over the past decade, building relations with co-workers and UK employers. It is argued that Latvians' position taking in the workplace and occupational mobility are directed by various forms of capital that are embedded in a transnational social field. The emergent structural properties of employment field guide migrants' trajectories towards the accumulation of particular capital. Eventually, as this article also argues, such structural conditioning impinges on migrants' personality traits and motivations that either foster or constrain transformative agency in the UK employment field.

You might also be interested in :

Do I deserve to belong? Migrants' perspectives on the debate of deservingness and belonging
The notion of belonging, prominent in social sciences, has been recently used extensively in relation to Central Eastern European migrants in the UK.
Racism and xenophobia experienced by Polish migrants in the UK before and after Brexit vote
In recent years the public discourses on Polish migration in the UK have rapidly turned hostile, especially in the context of economic crisis in 2008, and subsequently after the EU referendum in 2016.
The impacts of international migration on the UK's ethnic populations
The United Kingdom faces demographic uncertainty, as negotiations for leaving the European Union (Brexit) proceed. Brexit has implications for international migration into and out of the UK, dependent on future immigration policy and on how attractive the UK will be as a labour market.
Migrant dentists, health system responses and future challenges: a case study of the United Kingdom and Australia
Dentists, managing highly prevalent oral disease are in demand across the world and hence potentially highly mobile. Both the United Kingdom and Australia, continue to be favourable destinations for migrant dentists.

Journal

JOURNAL OF ETHNIC AND MIGRATION STUDIES

Author

Article meta

Country / region covered

Population studied

Year of Publication

Source type