1. What does the experience of Haitian migrants in Brazil tell us about some distinguishing features of contemporary capitalism in the Global South?
2. Critically assess how immigration policy in the UK evolved from 2004 to the present.
3. With reference to the UK, what challenges do more flexible employment arrangements have for the regulation of employment relationships?
4. With reference to Andy Crane’s Modern Slavery as a Management Practice framework, explore the conditions that have historically enabled forced labour in Uzbekistan’s cotton sector.
The UK's immigration policy has changed significantly in the last decade. In 2004, the Labour government introduced a points-based system to assess immigrants' eligibility for visas. This system was designed to make it more difficult for low-skilled workers to immigrate to the UK. The Conservative government that took office in 2010 tightened the rules further, making it more difficult for immigrants to obtain visas.
The current Conservative government has also made it more difficult for immigrants to access benefits and public services. In 2013, it introduced a new law that requires all immigrants to wait three months before they can access certain benefits. The government has also introduced measures that make it more difficult for immigrants to bring their families to the UK.
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