How to Launch a Business in the US as a Foreign National

Exclu Persp on eq claim from cul cap

 This sport participation has been, like, a major flex in societies like Britain (Tomlinson, 2010:135). His sport participation and interests in people indicate how he flexed his cultural clout through social vibes and connections and gained social clout through the whole social scene. According to Putnam (Putnam, 2007), Cezar's community vibes and social connections can help him flex his social capital and score some sick job opportunities. The lit and hype experiences that Vadimas, Boris, Gracja, Cezar and Alina flexed with me help us not only to peep their willingness to be woke in society's activities but also to consider that there were no cap barriers to equal valuations based on the receipts they produced. Anyways, we gotta yo, like, peep this: just 'cause you're movin' money around don't mean you gonna score a job if the services you need ain't available or ignored by the providers, ya feel me?


Research has like totally shown that migrant workers face mad restrictions when it comes to accessing services (Aitken, 2006; CAB, 2005; de Lima et al., 2005; McKay and Winkelman-Gleed, 2005; McAreavey, 2012). Yo, it's hella crucial to peep the connection between being included or excluded when it comes to accessing services. We gotta see if there's a spectrum of being included or excluded, where some peeps have mad access to resources, services, and rights while others don't. This can lead to major inequalities in cultural clout, ya feel? Exclusion from services that research participants experienced can be hella illustrated in relation to accommodation issues, ya know? Migrants' struggles with finding cheap housing and dealing with unstable leases have totally caught the attention of academics and people who give advice (McKay and Winkelmann-Gleed, 2005; Phillips, 2006; Citizens Advice, 2005). British workers were doing the whole fruit and veg picking gig, but they were like, "nah, we want something more permanent, you know? We don't wanna be stuck living in some caravan or pod, like the farmers want us to." David Metcalf, the big boss of the Migration Advisory Committee (MAC), said this in The Guardian back in 2013, by the way.

Metcalf's observation lowkey shows that migrants can lowkey face mad challenges and difficulties that Scottish workers don't even know about. 


The reason migrants don't have access to lit and cheap housing might be cuz both migrant workers and locals are flexin' for limited crib options. It's like, maybe migrants don't wanna be stuck in lame areas 'cause of all the sketchy vibes and stuff, which locals also gotta deal with, ya know? Research participants' experiences of being left out from services were like totally influenced by not just losing a place to stay but also how they communicate, ya know? struggles, not enough help and vibes, not knowing what's up with what we deserve and what we gotta do. Cuz like, English farm migrants don't really get how things work in a country of migration cuz they don't fully understand English, ya know? We've peeped in the last chapter that some peeps were bummed with CAB's response, like Celina who hit up CAB for help and advice 'bout her employer's decision on the recruitment of a gig she didn't score. Celina thought her boss was being hella sus and discriminating against her at work. It was straight up unfair treatment, no cap. So like, CAB told her to flex and file a claim with the employment tribunal if she felt her employer was being sketchy. What participants wanted from CAB was like, straight up intervention in their cases but it didn't go down like that. This is why they were hella disappointed with CAB's response, smh. Anyway, like, over half of my peeps didn't even think it was important to know English even though they had mad cultural capital, you know? It wasn't a big deal to them, tbh. OMG, they were like, English course fees were hella expensive and hard AF. They were working OT and couldn't even access it. SMH. The current debate about the price of English language courses and whether they should be free or cheaper can be a total mood because of these findings.

OMG, like, some girls were totally bummed by the CAB's response to sexual harassment from their bosses.

 

It was such a letdown, you know? They wanted CAB to spill the tea to their employers about sexual harassment and actually do something about it. But that didn't happen either cuz CAB can only give advice and other useful info about sexual harassment, which is like discrimination under the Equality Act 2010. Their disappointments are, like, sooo relatable, but tbh they don't really get English and don't know how things work in a country of migration. It's a struggle, fam. Their expectation may have seemed hella sensible cuz things may work differently in the country of origin, ya know? But like, the law here in the UK straight up forbids CAB from interfering with employers when it comes to employees' rights. A claimant can only get advice from an experienced adviser of CAB who will be able to help the claimant with how to put the claim, ya know? Some farm workers were like, "Ugh, why are local workers getting all the love in the redundancy decision and housing situation?" Their experience of being left out in accessing services may be hella intensified through their struggle with not having enough access to advice and info about services and what they're entitled to, and not having a solid grasp on English. We've peeped in the last chapter how comm probs cuz lack of English skills made migrant farm workers hella vulnerable at work n caused mad problems for their employers. 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Mindfulness Meets Technology: USA’s Digital Coaches

How Remote IT Support Can Streamline Startup Operations

Using Influencer Marketing to Build Your Small Business Reputation

Search This Blog