Law, technology, and migrant agency in European labour markets
When
18 February 2026
11:00 - 12:30 CET
Where
Cappella, Villa Schifanoia and online
How do migrants interpret, mobilise, and contest EU labour migration law? Why does precarious migrant labour persists despite techno-optimist narratives?
This session brings together two perspectives on how institutions and actors co-produce migration and work. The first paper to be presented compares the Netherlands and the UK to examine how automation and digital agriculture intersect with labour regulation, immigration policy, unions, employers, and migrant workers, showing why precarious migrant labour persists despite techno-optimist narratives.
The second paper develops legal agency as a framework for understanding how migrants interpret, mobilise, and contest EU labour migration law. It highlights how law not only structures resources and constraints but also shapes imaginaries and aspirations, calling for a reflective, decolonial legal methodology centered on migrant voices. Together, the papers trace how technology, law, and lived experience jointly configure opportunities, precarity, and pathways of action.
The Migration Working Group (MWG) is a researcher-led research group, whose aim is to foster exchange on the latest, cutting-edge migration research and give the opportunity to early career scholars and PhD researchers to present their research.
Discussant
Aikaterini Orfanidi
European University Institute
Natascha Zaun
University of Lüneburg
Scientific Organiser
Eréndira León
European University Institute
Andreea-Maria Ferent
European University Institute
Marianna Hu
European University Institute
Researcher Mustapha Kokumo
EUI
Speaker
Andreea-Maria Ferent
European University Institute
Angélica Cocomá Ricaurt
Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology
Chair
Eréndira León
European University Institute