TY - BOOK AU - Cairns,David AU - Cuzzocrea,Valentina AU - Briggs,Daniel AU - Veloso,Luísa ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - The Consequences of Mobility: Reflexivity, Social Inequality and the Reproduction of Precariousness in Highly Qualified Migration SN - 9783319467412 AV - GN370 U1 - 304.8 23 PY - 2017/// CY - Cham PB - Springer International Publishing, Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan KW - Emigration and immigration KW - Industrial sociology KW - Labor economics KW - Social structure KW - Social inequality KW - Human geography KW - Social policy KW - Migration KW - Sociology of Work KW - Labor Economics KW - Social Structure, Social Inequality KW - Human Geography KW - Comparative Social Policy N1 - 1. The Mobility Dream and its Consequences -- 2. Mobility Contexts -- 3. New Dilemmas in Europe’s Race for Global Talent: A Wrong Turn for Tertiary Education? -- 4. Working for Europe? Managing Erasmus+ in the Austerity Era -- 5. Recruiting Interns and Keeping them ‘Externs’: Mobility Paradoxes in Internship Governance -- 6. Being a Researcher: Professional Stability and Career Trajectories in Science and Technology -- 7. The Unsettled Future: Future Challenges in Highly Qualified Mobility; Available to subscribing member institutions only. Доступно лише організаціям членам підписки N2 - This book explores various forms of highly skilled mobility in the European Union, assessing the potential for this movement to contribute to individual and societal development. In doing so, the authors illustrate some of the issues arising from the opening up of Europe’s borders, and exposing its education systems and labour markets to international competition. While acknowledging the potentially positive aspects of mobility, they also reveal many of the negative consequences arising from flaws in mobility governance and inequalities in access to opportunities, arguing that when the management of mobility goes ‘wrong’, we are left with a heightened level of precariousness and the reproduction of social inequality. This discussion will be of interest to those working within Europe’s mobility infrastructure, as well as policymakers in the mobility field and students and scholars from across the social sciences UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-46741-2 ER -