RT Article T1 ‘But the Dutch would call it exploitation’: crimmigration and the moral economy of the Chinese catering industry in the Netherlands JF Crime, law and social change VO 66 IS 1 SP 83 OP 100 A1 Hiah, Jing A1 Staring, Richard 1962- A2 Staring, Richard 1962- LA English YR 2016 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1853788570 AB Based on qualitative research into the Chinese catering industry in the Netherlands, this article describes labour relations between Chinese employers and their (undocumented) employees against the background of a society in which criminal, administrative, and immigration law increasingly converge. The authors argue that the intertwining of these three fields of law asks for an adaptation of the concept of crimmigration. Furthermore the authors claim that an overemphasis on the legal definition of ‘labour exploitation’ distances law from the people it addresses as it reduces employers to offenders and employees to victims. Such a normative perspective prevents us from gaining further insights into underlying issues such as illegal stay, informal labour practices and labour relations within migrant niches. The authors argue on the contrary that Chinese restaurant owners and their employees operate in a ‘moral economy’ where labour relations are influenced not only by formal rules and a demand for reasonably priced food and flexible, motivated, inexpensive and skilled employees, but also by informal rules and culturally shared expectations about justice and reciprocity. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 99-100 K1 Human Trafficking K1 Labour Exploitation K1 Moral Economy K1 Undocumented Immigrant K1 Undocumented Migrant DO 10.1007/s10611-016-9625-7