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Low-wage Labour Migration Regimes in Asia : Lessons from Across the Governance Spectrum - Arwen Joyce
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Low-wage Labour Migration Regimes in Asia

Lessons from Across the Governance Spectrum

By: Arwen Joyce

Hardcover | 8 June 2026 | Edition Number 1

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This book examines how low-wage labour migration policies in seven Asian economies shape the experiences of migrant workers, highlighting two contrasting regulatory approaches that define a governance spectrum. Providing key theoretical insight, this spectrum offers a fresh perspective on which policies exacerbate migrant workersâ vulnerability to exploitation, and which are most conducive to workersâ success.

The book argues that the regulatory choice to either invest in and manage, or privatise and outsource, key labour migration governance functions have a material impact on outcomes for workers. Specifically, the data demonstrate that migrant workers in destination economies in Asia that take a government-managed approach pay lower recruitment costs, enjoy greater labour market mobility and earn higher wages as they benefit from greater labour law protections. Conversely, migrant workers in employer-managed regimes pay higher recruitment costs, have more limited labour market mobility, earn less and are more vulnerable to mistreatment at the hands of their employers. In addition to a thorough regional analysis, the book presents three case studies that examine the employer-managed approach followed by Singapore since the 1970s, the government-managed approach adopted by South Korea in 2004, and the government-managed approach pursued in Thailand including through legislative reforms implemented in 2017, and outcomes for low-wage migrant workers in all three countries. The final chapter argues that apex court judgments from these three countries reflect and reinforce their governmentâs approach to low-wage labour migration governance.

Identifying urgently needed reforms that would materially improve outcomes for millions of low-wage migrant workers in Asia and beyond, this book will be of interest to lawmakers, migrant worker advocates and researchers of Asian migration, labour migration, labour law and socio-legal studies.

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