Description

Book Synopsis
This book analyses the gendered terrain of skilled immigration policies across twelve countries and thirty seven skilled immigration visas. It argues that while skilled immigration policies are often gendered, this outcome is not inevitable and that governments possess considerable scope in policy design.

Trade Review

'Gender, migration and the global race for talent addresses a key concern for twenty-first century governments: how to recognize and eliminate gender discrimination in skilled immigration policy. Anna Boucher offers a well-documented and critical cross-national comparative examination of skilled immigration policies across twelve OECD countries, across the past several decades, and proposes an overhaul of antiquated policies based on a "male breadwinner/female trailing spouse model" that do not match the realities of the twenty-first century skilled work force or employer needs, and do not align with values of diversity and equity.'
Karen Garner, SUNY Empire State College

-- .

Table of Contents

Introduction
Part I: The global race for talent: global context
1. Skill and gender: navigating the theoretical terrain
2. Gender awareness of skilled immigration policies across the OECD: presenting the GenderImmi Dataset
Part II: Gendering skilled immigration policy in Australia and Canada, 1988–2013
3. Gendering the policy process: venue shopping and diversity-seeking
4. Changing the mix: the shift from family to skilled immigration, 1988–2003
5. New selection grids: points tests and gender effects, 1993–2003
6. Targeting skills during the global financial crisis, 2007–13: gendered winners and losers?
7. Mining booms and Nanny-Gate: the gendered terrain of temporary economic immigration, 2007–13
8. Activist mobilising, state sponsorship and venue shopping capabilities
Appendix 1. Elite interviews conducted with relevant Australians
Appendix 2. Elite interviews conducted with relevant Canadians
Appendix 3. Methodological appendix and elite interviewing schedule
Bibliography

Gender Migration and the Global Race for Talent

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    A Hardback by Anna Boucher

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      View other formats and editions of Gender Migration and the Global Race for Talent by Anna Boucher

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 2/1/2016 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780719099458, 978-0719099458
      ISBN10: 0719099455

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book analyses the gendered terrain of skilled immigration policies across twelve countries and thirty seven skilled immigration visas. It argues that while skilled immigration policies are often gendered, this outcome is not inevitable and that governments possess considerable scope in policy design.

      Trade Review

      'Gender, migration and the global race for talent addresses a key concern for twenty-first century governments: how to recognize and eliminate gender discrimination in skilled immigration policy. Anna Boucher offers a well-documented and critical cross-national comparative examination of skilled immigration policies across twelve OECD countries, across the past several decades, and proposes an overhaul of antiquated policies based on a "male breadwinner/female trailing spouse model" that do not match the realities of the twenty-first century skilled work force or employer needs, and do not align with values of diversity and equity.'
      Karen Garner, SUNY Empire State College

      -- .

      Table of Contents

      Introduction
      Part I: The global race for talent: global context
      1. Skill and gender: navigating the theoretical terrain
      2. Gender awareness of skilled immigration policies across the OECD: presenting the GenderImmi Dataset
      Part II: Gendering skilled immigration policy in Australia and Canada, 1988–2013
      3. Gendering the policy process: venue shopping and diversity-seeking
      4. Changing the mix: the shift from family to skilled immigration, 1988–2003
      5. New selection grids: points tests and gender effects, 1993–2003
      6. Targeting skills during the global financial crisis, 2007–13: gendered winners and losers?
      7. Mining booms and Nanny-Gate: the gendered terrain of temporary economic immigration, 2007–13
      8. Activist mobilising, state sponsorship and venue shopping capabilities
      Appendix 1. Elite interviews conducted with relevant Australians
      Appendix 2. Elite interviews conducted with relevant Canadians
      Appendix 3. Methodological appendix and elite interviewing schedule
      Bibliography

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