Abstract

Controlling mobility and borders has become a central, defining feature of the state today. Using the Norwegian welfare state as a case study, I argue that the differentiation of rights depending on status categories is an important way in which the state deals with irregular migration. It is also an integral element of border construction and how mobility is managed. How is the Norwegian welfare state differentiating the rights to work, health care, and economic welfare benefits and through which argumentations does the state legitimate these differentiations? This article argues that the practice of differentiation contributes to establishing hierarchies of belonging and enforces the nexus of welfare rights–migration management. Further, the exclusion of certain categories of people from accessing basic welfare services and, consequently, creating precarious lives, is legitimized by the discourse of humanitarian exceptionalism, through which migrants gain some support outside the welfare state system. This facilitates policies and regulations that are “tough on migration”, and produces the irregular subject as apolitical, a victim, and unwanted. The differentiation of rights and the discourses that the state uses to legitimate these differentiations are keys in the negotiation of who should be entitled to which rights in the future.

Highlights

  • In the spectacle of borders, citizenship and its subsequent rights play a key part in how and where borders materialize

  • In Norway, there are around 18,000 irregular migrants—mostly rejected asylum seekers who have not returned to their country of origin (Oslo Economics, 2014)

  • The welfare state system has been opened up for the increased use of differentiation based on legal status when it comes to health care, and when it comes to economic benefits

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Summary

Introduction

In the spectacle of borders, citizenship and its subsequent rights play a key part in how and where borders materialize. While the two latter are related to welfare benefits, the right to work is indirectly linked insofar that the Norwegian constitution § 110 declares that if one cannot “support oneself” one has the right to support from the public (Kongeriket Norges, 2018, § 110) These are fields of rights that represent important constituents, as will be discussed, in the production of who should belong and be included in the Norway welfare state. I first lay out the mechanisms by which the modern welfare state creates a type of inclusion/exclusion dynamic and turn to the Norwegian welfare state as my case study In this part, I explore the policies concerning health care for irregular migrants, followed by an investigation of how the right to work has been regulated for refugees and a discussion of how changes in economic benefits of irregular migrants have played out. Production in contemporary Norway by investigating aspects of belonging and humanitarian exceptionalism

The Welfare State’s People Production as an Analytical Framework
Asylum Seekers
Irregular Migrants
Economic Welfare Benefits
Responses to Differentiations of Rights
Findings
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
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