New York Times
Op-Ed Contributor 
Workers Without Borders 



 
By JENNIFER GORDON
Published: March 9, 2009 

AMERICANS are hardly in the mood to welcome new immigrants. The last thing we 
need, the reasoning goes, is more competition for increasingly scarce jobs. But 
the need for immigration reform is more urgent than ever. The current system 
hurts wages and working conditions — for everyone.
Today, millions of undocumented immigrants accept whatever wage is offered. 
They don’t protest out of fear of being fired or deported. A few hundred 
thousand guest workers, brought in for seasonal and agricultural jobs, know 
that asserting their rights could result in a swift flight home. This system 
traps migrants in bad jobs and ends up lowering wages all around.
The solution lies in greater mobility for migrants and a new emphasis on 
workers’ rights. If migrants could move between jobs, they would be free to 
expose abusive employers. They would flow to regions with a shortage of 
workers, and would also be able to return to their home countries when the 
outlook there brightened, or if jobs dried up here. 
Imagine if the United States began admitting migrants on the condition that 
they join a network of workers’ organizations here and in their home countries 
— a sort of transnational union. Migrants could work here legally. They could 
take jobs anywhere in the country and stay as long as they liked. But they 
would have to promise to report employers that violated labor laws. They could 
lose their visas by breaking that promise.
This plan, which I call Transnational Labor Citizenship, would give employers 
access to many more workers on fair terms. It would give people from countries 
like Mexico greater opportunities to earn the remittances upon which their 
families and economies rely. It would address the inconsistency and inhumanity 
of policies that support free trade in goods and jobs but bar the free movement 
of people.
How could we make this happen? Congress could certainly mandate the change. If 
that seems unlikely, we could start with a bilateral labor migration agreement 
with a country like Mexico, making membership in a transnational workers’ 
organization and a commitment to uphold workplace laws a requirement for 
Mexicans to obtain work here. 
We might try a smaller pilot project involving a single union in an industry 
like residential construction or agriculture. One model would be the Farm Labor 
Organizing Committee’s guest worker union, which protects migrant agricultural 
workers on some North Carolina farms. The union provides representation and 
benefits wherever the workers are. It has organizers near North Carolina’s 
tobacco and cucumber fields, and an office in Mexico, where the laborers return 
home for the winter.
Migrant mobility has been tried with success in the European Union. When the 
Union expanded in 2004 to include eight Eastern European countries, workers in 
Western Europe feared a flood of job seekers who would drive down wages. In 
Britain, for example, the volume of newcomers from countries like Poland was 
staggering. Instead of the prediction of roughly 50,000 migrants in four years, 
more than a million arrived. 
Yet, as far as economists can tell, the influx did not take a serious toll on 
native workers’ wages or employment. (Of course, what happens in the global 
downturn remains to be seen.) Migrants who were not trapped in exploitative 
jobs flocked to areas that needed workers and shunned the intense competition 
of big cities. And when job opportunities grew in Poland or shrank in Britain, 
fully half went home again. 
To be sure, Europe’s approach has its problems. Some migrants were cheated on 
their wages and worked in unsafe conditions. This illustrates that mobility 
alone is not enough. We also need good workplace protections, and effective 
support to realize them. 
Unions could play a key role in rights enforcement if they embraced migrants as 
potential members, becoming for the first time truly transnational 
institutions. And government could partner with workers’ organizations. 
Recently, the New York Department of Labor announced that it had begun to work 
with immigrant centers and unions to catch violators. This is a promising 
example of a new alliance to protect the rights of both immigrants and 
native-born workers.
Like it or not, until we address the vast inequalities across the globe, those 
who want to migrate will find a way. Despite stepped-up enforcement at the 
borders, hundreds of thousands of immigrants still come illegally to the United 
States every year. Raids terrorize immigrants but do not make them go home. 
Instead, rigid quotas, harsh immigration laws and heavy-handed enforcement lock 
people in. As the recession deepens, undocumented immigrants will hunker down 
more. They may work less, for worse pay, but they will be terrified to go home 
out of fear they can never return.
The United States needs an open and fair system, not a holding pen. The best 
way forward is to create an immigration system with protection for all workers 
at its core.

Jennifer Gordon is a professor of labor and immigration law at Fordham Law 
School.
 
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