HOME
ABOUT US
Our story
Our team
Our board
How we achieve change
Our values
Our goals for 2023-2026
Our impact
Join our team
Contact us
KEY PROJECTS
PUBLICATIONS
All Publications
Reports and books
Research and Policy Guides
Submissions
Webinars
Articles
News
Opinion Pieces
MEDIA
Recent media coverage
For Migrants
Where to go for help
Video explainers
DONATE

Migrant Justice Institute

HOME
ABOUT US
Our story
Our team
Our board
How we achieve change
Our values
Our goals for 2023-2026
Our impact
Join our team
Contact us
KEY PROJECTS
PUBLICATIONS
All Publications
Reports and books
Research and Policy Guides
Submissions
Webinars
Articles
News
Opinion Pieces
MEDIA
Recent media coverage
For Migrants
Where to go for help
Video explainers
DONATE
Understanding International Students' Professed Satisfaction with Underpaid Work in Australia
1 December 2021
ARTICLES
Guest User
Understanding International Students' Professed Satisfaction with Underpaid Work in Australia
Guest User
1 December 2021
ARTICLES

Understanding International Students' Professed Satisfaction with Underpaid Work in Australia

Guest User
1 December 2021
ARTICLES

Alexander Reilly, Joanna Howe, Laurie Berg and Bassina Farbenblum, 'Understanding International Students' Professed Satisfaction with Underpaid Work in Australia' (2021) 46(3) MonashUniversity Law Review 50 (Advance)

read THE ARTICLE

Source:https://bridges.monash.edu/articles/journal_contribution/Understanding_International_Students_Professed_Satisfaction_with_Underpaid_Work_in_Australia_Advance_/14158454

Newer PostMigrant Workers' Access to Justice for Wage Theft: A global study of promising initiatives
Older PostInternational Students and Wage Theft in Australia
 

Subscribe for updates

SUBSCRIBE
 
Back to Top
Migrant Justice Institute
 
 

The Migrant Justice Institute respectfully acknowledges the Gadigal and Bedegal peoples of the Eora Nation and
the Wurundjeri people of the Kulin Nations, the traditional owners and custodians of the land on which we work.
We pay our respects to their elders past and present and acknowledge that sovereignty was never ceded.