Bureaucracy and the politics of time in state-business relations: Waiting to recruit migrant labour in Mauritius

Time is money. According to E.P. Thompson, this saying lies at the core of the logic of capitalism. And yet, in the vast literature on state-capital relations, the strategic value of time has remained relatively neglected compared to rent distribution and monetary exchanges. Elaborating on the recru...

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Veröffentlicht in:Theory and society 2023-03, Vol.52 (2), p.333-352
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description Time is money. According to E.P. Thompson, this saying lies at the core of the logic of capitalism. And yet, in the vast literature on state-capital relations, the strategic value of time has remained relatively neglected compared to rent distribution and monetary exchanges. Elaborating on the recruitment of migrants by employers and their intermediaries in Mauritius, this article explores the role of bureaucratic time and delays in businesses’ access to the fundamental resource for economic accumulation: labour. It reveals a bifurcated bureaucratic pathway, a two-speed logic in the Mauritian bureaucracy of migration. On one side is the lengthy and unpredictable process of administering the authorisations to recruit foreign workers; on the other appear what I term the “shortcuts through the red tape”, the exemptions to the bureaucratic procedures and delays that benefit politically connected actors. Drawing on this case study, I contend that the politics of waiting, inherent to bureaucratic routine, matters in the relations between business and the state.
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source Springer journals; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Accumulation
Alien labor
Bureaucracy
Business
Capitalism
Case studies
Employers
Foreign labor
Humanities and Social Sciences
Labor
Labor migration
Migrant labor
Migrant workers
Migrants
Migration
Money
Philosophy of the Social Sciences
Political science
Politics
Recruiting
Recruitment
Social Sciences
Sociology
Time
title Bureaucracy and the politics of time in state-business relations: Waiting to recruit migrant labour in Mauritius
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