Anna K. Boucher is Associate Professor in Comparative Politics and Public Policy at the University of Sydney. She is a global migration expert, with a focus on the ways migration intersects with public policy and comparative politics. Her research also covers gender diversity, inequality, and labor market and regulatory change. She has written three books on migration that cover skilled immigration, gender diversity, and workplace exploitation, as well as numerous articles and scholarly book chapters.
Boucher has written an immensely useful treatise on how a precarious, temporary, immigration status, or the lack of a valid immigration status, impacts the workplace rights that workers in four key high-income jurisdictions are able to exercise and enforce in practice. The Migrant Worker Rights Database, created by Boucher, provides a new source of data that will inform scholars and advocates alike about how different legal frameworks may facilitate or hinder the ability of migrants to enforce their rights. Boucher's findings will ultimately be invaluable for efforts to push for structural changes that better protect migrant workers around the world through regulation, legislation, and enforcement. * Daniel Costa, Director of Immigration Law and Policy Research, Economic Policy Institute * Beginning each chapter with an engaging account of an individual migrant's encounter with the legal system, Anna Boucher vividly depicts the key themes that emerge from a database comprised of litigation brought by migrant workers in Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States to enforce their labor rights. Patterns of Exploitations provides a compelling comparative analysis of violations of migrant workers' labour rights in four key migrant-receiving countries by weaving a quantitative analysis of the innovative database with insights from key legal actors. This excellent book should be read by anyone interested in how migrant workers are exploited and how to stop it. * Judy Fudge, Professor in Global Labour Issues, McMaster University * Patterns of Exploitation is an ambitious book that explores one component of the migrant rights puzzle. Migrants are workers and human beings, yet their workplace rights are not protected to the same extent as citizen workers. To discover why these differences exist, Boucher systematically surveys legal cases filed by migrant workers across four national jurisdictions and generates an overview of the types of exploitation that migrants experience. In contrast to the prevailing notion that courts in liberal democracies tend to protect migrants, she finds that courts safeguard migration worker rights only in so far as workers are protected by the law and the law recognizes migrant vulnerabilities. This book provides a major corrective to our understanding of the role of the courts in liberal democracies in protecting migrant rights and it will be widely cited. * Jeannette Money, Professor of Political Science, University of California, Davis *