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This Ad Hoc Query concerns the effectiveness of the Blue Card Directive with regard to attracting highly skilled workers.
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Possibilities for low-skilled immigrants in the Norwegian labour market of tomorrow.
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The main study of the European Migration Network in 2012 concerns the migration of international students to the EU.
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This study, based on national contributions from 21 EMN Members, investigates intra-EU mobility of third-country nationals (TCNs). Norway did not contribute to this study.
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Irregular migration to Norway has increasingly become a subject of discussion among politicians and in the media, often in connection with individual cases involving persons who have stayed irregularly for a number of years.
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The Nordic welfare model is vulnerable to large inflows of persons with low qualifications. The public cost of low skilled immigration will be higher in Scandinavia than in countries with less ambitious welfare models.
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Information on ratification of ILO Domestic Workers Convention concerning irregular migrant domestic workers.
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This study investigates policies for attracting highly qualified and qualified third-country nationals and is based on contributions from 23 EU Member States. Norway did not contribute to this study.
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This Ad Hoc Query concerns labor migration regulation.
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This Synthesis Report summaries the main findings of the National Reports for the EMN Study on Satisfying Labour Demand through Migration undertaken by EMN National Contact Points from 23 Member States.
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The main objective of the project is to contribute to better understanding of the significance of gender and ethnicity in the formulation of the equality politics of the Norwegian welfare state.
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This Ad Hoc Query concerns circular migration and temporary labour migration schemes (2014).
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This inform from the European Migration Network (EMN) provides an overview of the implementation of the right of accompanied children to be heard in international protection procedures in EU member states and Norway.
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This European Migration Network (EMN) study documents the labour market access of applicants for international protection between 2017 to 2022.