Résultat 1 ressource
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Labour migration, which involves both labour immigration and labour emigration, refers to ‘the cross-border movement of people from a homeland to a location outside that homeland, with the purpose of taking up employment’.1 Labour migration has become an ever more important feature of the globalising world as it plays an important role and has a direct impact on African countries’ economies and societies.2 Recognising the significant benefits of labour migration to countries of origin and destination, the African Union urges African States to enact labour migration laws, regulations, and policies in a regular, transparent, and comprehensive manner at both continental and country levels.3 In this regard, many African countries have exercised their prerogative to regulate labour migration, which falls within each state’s sovereign discretion. By way of illustration, this thesis focuses on two specific countries, namely the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and South Africa, which have regulated the employment of foreign-born workers. The two countries have established a legal and regulatory framework aimed at protecting the national labour force against foreign competition. The two countries have been selected for this study because they are comparable in many ways while differing as much as possible in terms of the institutional set-up of their migration systems and labour markets. In fact, this study seeks to compare the DRC’s and South Africa’s labour migration laws, regulations and policies, particularly how these legal and regulatory instruments effectively protect the national labour force against foreign competition. In this sense, the study explores the overall successes and challenges of these legislative and regulatory endeavours, while identifying the shortcomings and merits of the implementation of the laws and policies in the two countries.