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Negotiating the Wild West: Variegated neoliberalisation of the Swedish labour migration regime and the wild berry migration industry

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  • Charlotta Hedberg

    (Department of Geography, 166465Umeå University, Sweden)

  • Irma Olofsson

    (Department of Geography, 166465Umeå University, Sweden)

Abstract

Neoliberalisation processes have long permeated Western societies, including a common direction towards neoliberal migration regimes. This paper combines the perspective of variegated neoliberalisation with the recent literature on migration industries, to investigate the neoliberalisation of the Swedish labour migration regime and how it affected and interacted with the wild berry migration industry. It shows how neoliberalisation as a historical and spatially contingent process resulted in the distinct phases of intertwined policymaking and enactment of the industry. The ‘roll back’ phase included mutual interests and ‘intimate relations’ between state and industry, which both empowered and increased the number of private actors, creating structures that remained during the regular restructuring phase of ‘roll out’ neoliberalisation. While adding the perspective of variegated neoliberalisation, the paper deepens the analysis of migration industries by pointing at neoliberalisation as a spatial and temporal process, where the interplay between state and industry, an enlarged number of intermediaries and the increased responsibility of private actors are central cornerstones. The Swedish case shows how the role of intermediaries in the wild berry migration industry was reconstructed in order for the neoliberal migration regime to regulate a previously irregular migration industry. It is concluded that strong but spatially contingent links exist between neoliberal political economies, migration regimes and migration industries.

Suggested Citation

  • Charlotta Hedberg & Irma Olofsson, 2022. "Negotiating the Wild West: Variegated neoliberalisation of the Swedish labour migration regime and the wild berry migration industry," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 54(1), pages 33-49, February.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:envira:v:54:y:2022:i:1:p:33-49
    DOI: 10.1177/0308518X211048195
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    References listed on IDEAS

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