Migrant workers come to developed countries hoping to survive, or escape from political and social persecution, but they fall prey to wild exploitation, and today they are the first to experience the consequences of the current economic and social crisis.
The 300 hundred migrant workers who are on hunger strike in Athens and Thessaloniki have been living and working in Greece for years. However, they are deprived of basic rights of the Greek workers; they have no right to free movement, to decent terms of employment, to health insurance, to personal dignity, to life as such!
We express our support to their struggle for human dignity and basic civil rights. Elementary social justice dictates to legalize migrant workers and abrogate their penal and bureaucratic persecution.
Étienne Balibar
Emeritus professor of philosophy, Université Paris-Ouest
Distinguished Professor, School of Humanities, University of California, Irvine
Renate Bridenthal
Emerita Professor of History
Brooklyn College, The City University of New York
Noam Chomsky
MIT Department of Linguistics
Institute Professor & Professor of Linguistics (Emeritus)
Marta Harnecker
Psychologist, Writer (Chile)
David Laibman
Professor, Economics, City University of New York
Michael A Lebowitz
Professor emeritus of Economics at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada
Peter McLaren
Professor, UCLAΜ, Graduate School of Education
Michael Perelman
Economics Department, California State University
Immanuel Wallerstein
Senior Research Scholar, Yale University