Not exact matches
In 2010, the Ghana Immigration Service reported that
there was a large number of
economic migrants and Illegal immigrants inhabiting Ghana 14.6 % (or 3.1 million) of Ghana's 2010 population (predominantly Nigerians, Burkinabe citizens, Togolese citizens, and Malian citizens).
To give a few examples, apart from those from outside the European
Economic Area who can not lawfully work at all,
there have been restrictions on
migrants from new EU members states (to self - employment for a period of seven years), those on Tier 2 visas (to a named employer), on students (who may work, but not full time or in a profession), and on domestic workers (who may not seek another employer even if abused).
Immigration We have agreed that
there should be an annual limit on the number of non-EU
economic migrants admitted into the UK to live and work.
«
There have been real
economic gains from the arrival of young, hard - working
migrants from eastern Europe over the past six years.
We have agreed that
there should be an annual limit on the number of non-EU
economic migrants admitted into the UK to live and work.
While UKIP supported
migrants coming to the UK to fill specific jobs - where
there were skills shortages - he said
economic problems in the eurozone meant the influx of low - skilled labour to the UK was likely to accelerate and questioned the social and cultural impact it had had.
(n42 above) p23 states that
there are policy shifts in the immigration and refugee policies towards restricting
economic migrants and refugees from entering South Africa and from accessing socioeconomic rights.
Generally, exclusion of refugees is grounded in the hyped fears of employers and service providers that the Immigration Act of 2002 could impose penalties on them if they do not comply with its rules.15 This misconception is further reinforced by political statements, which hold that the majority of refugees are bogus or
economic migrants who are in South Africa in a search of a better life.16
There is apparently an inability to distinguish between applicability of the immigration regime and refugee regime.17 However, it is true that the Refugees Act of 1998 strictly exempts refugees and asylum - seekers from the immigration restrictive measures imposed on non-citizens in certain circumstances.
All scholarship on the relationship between climate migration and unrest (including Kelley et al's paper) makes clear that
there is always a complex of factors, which begs the question: can international law make decisions on conferring
migrant or refugee status if someone is, say, a 30 % climate
migrant, a 20 %
economic migrant, and a 50 % war refugee?
In India, Ahmedabad has launched its own heat action plan and
there are 13 cities in 11 states that have a heat action plan in place, but when it comes to building smart cities, much needs to be done to factor in policies to fight the heat stress, especially when
migrant labour and people from the low
economic strata are the ones most prone to it.