Who steals jobs? Who owns jobs?
Focusing on the competitive labour market, this book scrutinises the narratives created around immigration and automation. The authors explore how the advances in AI and demands for constant flow of immigrant workers eradicate political and working rights, fuelling fears over job theft and ownership.
Shedding light on the multiple ways in which employment is used as an instrument of neoliberal governance, this revealing book sparks new debate on the role of automation and migration policies. It is an invaluable resource for academics and practitioners working in the areas of immigration and labour, capitalism and social exclusion, and economic models and political governance.
Table of Content
1. Introduction: Stealing Jobs
2. The Re-Birth of Homo Oeconomicus: Self and Other, Immigrants and Robot
3. “A Necessary Evil”: Progress Through Normalising Inequalities and Competition
4. I, Robot
5. The Men Machines: Migrants as Robots
6. Expensive Robots vs Cheap Migrants
7. Nostalgia, Futurism and the Re-emergence of the Common
About the author
Denny Pencheva is Lecturer in European Politics and Public Policy at University College London.