Free Movement Rights for Atypical Workers

Free Movement Rights for Atypical Workers cover

Description

This book challenges the existing focus in EU citizenship scholarship which tends to look only at the economically active. Arguing that the deliberately vague EU concept of 'work' allows for its restricted application in Member States, it shows how many workers and economic contributors are left out of the free movement regime. It does this by taking a mixed methods approach: relying on both qualitative case studies and legal analysis of EU and UK legislation, case law, and decision maker guidance. All this leads to the author making a significant and original argument that, if EU free movement rights are awarded on the basis of market credentials, more must be done to work towards a more contemporary, accurate and inclusive market citizenship.

Provocative and thought-provoking, this will appeal to all scholars of EU free movement law.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction
2. 'What a Way to Make a Living': The Rise and Risks of the Atypical Labour Market
3. Schrodinger's Worker: When is a Worker not a Worker?
4. Taking Liberties: The UK's Minimum Earnings Threshold Narrows the EU Concept of Work
5. Inequality Squared: How the MET Compounds Discrimination
6. 'Citizens of Nowhere'?: The Limitations and Challenges of Supranational Citizenship
7. To Each According to Their Affluence: Atypical Workers and the Limits of Free Movement Rights
8. Conclusion

Product details

Published 08 Feb 2024
Format Ebook (Epub & Mobi)
Edition 1st
Extent 272
ISBN 9781509966615
Imprint Hart Publishing
Series Modern Studies in European Law
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Alice Welsh

Alice Welsh is Lecturer at the University of York,…

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