Migration Governance across Regions

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A01=Ana Margheritis
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Author_Ana Margheritis
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Brazilian Government
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Citizenship
Civil Society
comparative migration policy research
Comparative Politics
Consular Offi Ces
Diaspora Engagement Policies
diaspora policy analysis
Emigrant Community
Emigration Policy
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Frente Amplio
Global Governance
Governador Valadares
IME
Immigrant Integration Policies
Immigration & Emigration
Infi Ghting
Institutional Revolutionary Party
Internal Displacement
International Relations
Latin American emigration
Latin American Studies
Migrant Associations
Migrant Organizational
migrant political participation
Migration
Migration Policies
Opened Offices
post-neoliberal governance
Public Administration
Sending Countries
Sending States
South American States
State Diaspora Relations
State Diaspora Relationship
State-Diaspora Policies
state-led outreach strategies
transnational citizenship
Transnationalism

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138909649
  • Weight: 950g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Dec 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Migration policies are rarely effective. Examples of unintended and undesirable outcomes abound. In Latin America, very little is known about the impact and long-term sustainability of state policies towards emigrants. Following a world-wide trend, Ecuador, Uruguay, Mexico, Argentina, and Brazil have developed new institutions and discourses to strengthen links; assist, protect and enfranchise migrants, and capture their resources. As an adaptation of governmental techniques to global realities, these policies redefine the contours of polities, nations, and citizenship, giving place to a new form of transnational governance.

Building upon field research done in these five states and two receiving countries in the last decade, Ana Margheritis explains the timing, motivations, characteristics, and implications of emigration policies implemented by each country, as well as the emergence of a distinctive regional consensus around a post-neoliberal approach to national development and citizenship construction. Margheritis argues that these outreach efforts resemble courting practices. Courting is a deliberate expression of the ambivalent, still incipient, and open-ended relationship between states and diasporas which is not exempt of conflict, detours, and setbacks. For various reasons, state-diaspora relations are not unfolding into stable and fruitful partnerships yet. Thus, she makes "diaspora engagement" problematic and investigates to what extent courting might become engagement in each case.

Studying emigration policies of five Latin American countries and migrant responses in Southern Europe sheds light on the political dynamics and governance mechanisms that transnational migration is generating across regions. It illuminates possible venues to manage multiple engagements of migrants with societies at both ends of their migration journey and unveils the opportunities for states and non-state actors to cooperatively manage of migration flows.

Ana Margheritis is Reader in International Relations at the University of Southampton. Her areas of expertise include transnational migration, comparative regional integration, foreign policy, inter-American relations, and Latin American political economy.

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