Anna Triandafyllidou is Professor at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies at the European University Institute, Florence, Italy and Senior Research Fellow at the Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP) in Athens, Greece. She is also Visiting Professor at the College of Europe in Bruges. Author of The Social Psychology of Party Behaviour; Immigrants and National Identity in Europe; and Negotiating Nationhood in a Changing Europe, she co-wrote What is Europe? and Migrant Smuggling. She has edited Irregular Migration in Europe and Muslims in 21st Century Europe; and co-edited European Immigration: A Sourcebook; European Multiculturalism(s); The European Public Sphere and the Media; Europeanisation, National Identities and Migration; Multiculturalism, Muslims and Citizenship; and Transcultural Europe. Anna Triandafyllidou, Marie Godin, Karin Sohler, Florence Levy, Lisa-Marie Heimeshoff, Helen Schwenken, Michaela Maroufof, Sally Daly, Paola Bonizzoni, Sarah van Walsum, Tania Gonzalez Fernandez, Thanos Maroukis.
'The book draws on in-depth research conducted in eight different European countries to explore the work of irregular migrant domestic workers as well as their family lives and health. In the process the book shows the important role that these workers play - independent of their migration status vis-a-vis the individual states - in allowing European welfare states to remain cost-efficient and functional, and European families to better manage the difficult balance of work and family.' Francesca Degiuli, CUNY College of Staten Island, USA 'This book truly shows the complexities of irregular migration and the challenges that domestic care workers face in a unique way; Anna Triandafyllidou has, once again, coordinated fascinating and comprehensive new research highlighting the political and more importantly the human realities across Europe today. This book impressively integrates policy analysis with theory while offering glimpses into the lives of real people who care, and who, indeed, are rarely cared for.' Ruby Gropas, College of Europe-Bruges, Belgium ' ... this book is an interesting reference source on the differences and similarities which exist in the experiences of irregular migrant domestic workers in the eight European countries under discussion.' Journal of Contemporary European Studies