From Center for Immigration Studies <[email protected]>
Subject Immigration Reading, 8/22/19
Date August 23, 2019 12:16 AM
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** Immigration Reading, 8/22/19
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Support the Center for Immigration Studies by donating on line here: [link removed] ([link removed])
GOVERNMENT DOCUMENTS
1. (#1) State Department Visa Bulletin - September 2019
2. (#2) DOJ report on immigration, citizenship, and the federal justice system
3. (#3) CRS reports on homeland security issues in Congress, DHS appropriations, asylum bars for migrants
4. (#4) Restricted GAO report on immigration-related prosecutions
5. (#5) Census Bureau population survey tables
6. (#6) Norway: Statistics on unemployment among immigrants
7. (#7) Sweden: Population statistics
8. (#8) Denmark: Statistics on asylum applications and residence permits
9. (#9) Germany: Reports on people with foreign backgrounds and professional qualifications recognized
10. (#10) N.Z.: Population and migration statistics

REPORTS, ARTICLES, ETC.
11. (#11) Heritage Foundation report on contempt authority for immigration judges
12. (#12) TRAC report on decline in ICE Secure Communities removals
12. (#12) Pew Center report on public attitudes toward asylum policy
13. (#13) CATO Institute report on resolving America's 'real' border problems
14. (#14) Urban Institute report on safety net access and the public charge rule
15. (#15) Report on a public health approach to policies that criminalize and integrate immigrants
17. (#17) New working paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research
18. (#18) Four new reports and features from the Migration Policy Institute
19. (#19) Ten new papers from the Social Science Research Network
20. (#20) Nineteen new postings from the Immigration Law Professors' Blog
21. (#21) New report from the International Organization for Migration
22. (#22) Canada: Fraser Institute report on highly-educated immigrants
23. (#23) Canada: "Can’t Go it Alone: Immigration Is Key to Canada’s Growth Strategy"

BOOKS
24. (#24) Skilled Labor Mobility and Migration: Challenges and Opportunities for the ASEAN Economic Community
25. (#25) The Unsettling of Europe: How Migration Reshaped a Continent
26. (#26) Social Work with Refugees, Asylum Seekers and Migrants: Theory and Skills for Practice
27. (#27) Precarious Hope: Migration and the Limits of Belonging in Turkey
28. (#28) Ethiopian Migrant Domestic Workers: Migrant Agency and Social Change
29. (#29) Australia, Migration and Empire: Immigrants in a Globalised World

JOURNALS
30. (#30) Comparative Migration Studies
31. (#31) Ethnic and Racial Studies
32. (#32) IZA Journal of Migration
33. (#33) Journal on Migration and Human Security
34. (#34) Latino Studies
35. (#35) The Centre on Migration, Policy, and Society

State Department Visa Bulletin
Vol. X, No. 33, September 2019
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Immigration, Citizenship, and the Federal Justice System, 1998-2018
By Mark Motivans
DOJ Office of Justice Programs, August 2019
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Highlights: Based on fiscal years— The portion of total federal arrests that took place in the fve judicial districts along the In 1998, 63% of all federal arrests were U.S.-Mexico border almost doubled from 1998 of U.S. citizens; in 2018, 64% of all (33%) to 2018 (65%) (table 6). federal arrests were of non-U.S. citizens Ninety-fve percent of the increase in federal (fgure 1 and table 4). arrests across 20 years was due to immigration Non-U.S. citizens, who make up 7% of the ofenses (table 1). U.S. population (per the U.S. Census Bureau In 2018, 90% of suspects arrested for federal for 2017) , accounted for 15% of all federal immigration crimes were male; 10% were arrests and 15% of prosecutions in U.S. district female (table 9).

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New from the Congressional Research Service

Selected Homeland Security Issues in the 116th Congress
Updated August 14, 2019
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The Department of Homeland Security's Reported "Metering" Policy: Legal Issues
By Hillel R. Smith
CRS Legal Sidebar, August 13, 2019
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Department of Homeland Security Appropriations: FY2019
Updated August 7, 2019
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Asylum Bar for Migrants Who Reach the Southern Border through Third Countries: Issues and Ongoing Litigation
By Ben Harrington
CRS Legal Sidebar, August 2, 2019
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New from the General Accountability Office

Immigration Enforcement: Immigration-Related Prosecutions Increased from 2017 to 2018 in Response to U.S. Attorney General's Direction
GAO-19-548SU: Published August 19, 2019
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Current Population Survey Table Packages Now Available by Sex for Race, Hispanic Origin and Foreign-Born Populations
U.S. Census Bureau, August 19, 2019
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Registered unemployed among immigrants
Statistics Norway, August 14, 2019
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Summary: 5.2 % of immigrants are registered as unemployed Q2 2019.

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Most immigrants were Swedish-born persons
Statistics Sweden, August 20, 2019
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Summary: The population of Sweden at the end of June 2019 was 10,281,189, which is 51,004 more persons than at the end of December 2018.

Immigration accounted for most of the population increase, although the level of immigration was the lowest on record since 2013. Sweden was the most common country of birth among the immigrants.

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Asylum applications and residence permits
Statistics Denmark, August 16, 2019
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One in four people in Germany had a migrant background in 2018
Statistics Germany, August 21, 2019
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Summary: In 2018, approximately 20.8 million people in Germany had a migrant background. Based on results of the microcensus, the Federal Statistical Office (Destatis) also reports that this was a 2.5% increase compared with a year earlier (2017: 20.3 million). A person has a migrant background if he or she or at least one parent did not acquire German citizenship by birth. In 2018 this applied to one in four people in Germany.

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20% more foreign professional qualifications recognised in 2018
High increase in the field of health occupations - many qualifications obtained in Syria were recognised
August 21, 2019
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International migration: June 2019
Statistics New Zealand, August 8, 2019
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Summary:

Annual
Year ended June 2019 (compared with year ended June 2018) provisional estimates:

migrant arrivals – 145,300 (± 1400), up 5 percent
migrant departures – 95,900 (± 1400), up 7 percent
annual net migration gain – 49,400 (± 1700), up from 48,900 (± 200).

For migrant arrivals in the June 2019 year, New Zealand citizens were the largest group with 34,600 (± 500) arrivals. The next largest groups were citizens of:
China – 17,600 (± 400)
India – 12,800 (± 200)
South Africa – 8,900 (± 200)
Australia – 8,700 (± 400)
Philippines – 8,100 (± 100).

For migrant departures in the June 2019 year, New Zealand citizens were the largest group with 48,000 (± 900) departures. The next largest groups were citizens of:
China – 8,100 (± 300)
United Kingdom – 6,000 (± 200)
India – 4,400 (± 200)
Australia – 4,300 (± 200).

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National population estimates: At June 30, 2019
August 14, 2019
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Summary: During the June 2019 year:

New Zealand's population grew by 76,000, or 1.6 percent

natural increase (births minus deaths) was 26,600 and net migration gain (arrivals minus departures) was 49,400.

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Authority Delayed Is Authority Denied: Giving Immigration Judges Contempt Authority
By Charles Stimson and GianCarlo Canaparo
The Heritage Foundation Legal Memorandum, August 8, 2019
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New from the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, Syracuse University

ICE Secure Communities Removals Falling
August 13, 2019
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Summary: Recently released Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) removal-by-removal records on Secure Communities (SC) reveal that the number of SC deportations has been trending downward during the past year. As of April 2019—the latest data available—the monthly number of SC removals had fallen to 6,152. This is down from 7,456 in May of 2018. These national trends are shown in Figure 1. The height of each bar reflects the actual number of SC deportations each month, while the superimposed line shows the moving 3-month average that smooths out month-to-month fluctuations.

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Public’s Priorities for U.S. Asylum Policy: More Judges for Cases, Safe Conditions for Migrants
Most continue to favor legal status for undocumented immigrants
Pew Research Center, August 12, 2019
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Legal Immigration Will Resolve America’s Real Border Problems
By David Bier
Policy Analysis No. 879, August 20, 2019
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Safety Net Access in the Context of the Public Charge Rule
By Hamutal Bernstein, Sara McTarnaghan, and Dulce Gonzalez
Urban Institute, August 7, 2019
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Included, but Deportable: A New Public Health Approach to Policies That Criminalize and Integrate Immigrants
By Maria-Elena De Trinidad Young and Steven P. Wallace
American Journal of Public Health, August 7, 2019
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New from the National Bureau of Economic Research

What is the Optimal Immigration Policy? Migration, Jobs and Welfare
By Joao Guerreiro, Sergio Rebelo, and Pedro Teles
NBER Working Paper No. 26154, August 2019
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New from the Migration Policy Institute

How Does Immigration Fit into the Future of the U.S. Labor Market?
By Pia M. Orrenius, Madeline Zavodny, and Stephanie Gullo
MPI Policy Brief, August 2019
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Immigration and the U.S. Labor Market: A Look Ahead
By Harry J. Holzer
MPI Policy Brief, August 2019
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Rethinking U.S. Immigration Policy: New Realities Call for New Answers
By Doris Meissner
MPI Policy Brief, August 2019
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Central American Immigrants in the United States
By Allison O’Connor, Jeanne Batalova, and Jessica Bolter
Migration Information Source Spotlight, August 15, 2019
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New from the Social Science Research Network

1. The Boundaries of Habeas: Due Process, the Suspension Clause, and Judicial Review of Expedited Removal Under the Immigration and Nationality Act
By Peter Margulies, Roger Williams University School of Law
Roger Williams Univ. Legal Studies Paper No. 192
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2. What is the Optimal Immigration Policy? Migration, Jobs and Welfare
By Joao Guerreiro, Northwestern University;Sergio T. Rebelo, Northwestern University Kellogg School of Management; and Pedro Teles, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago; Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR)
CEPR Discussion Paper No. DP13909
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3. Should Canada reform its refugee policy?
By Andrew Teo, Independent
Posted: August 19, 2019
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4. My Family Belongs to Me: A Child’s Right to Family Integrity
By Shanta Trivedi, University of Baltimore School of Law
University of Baltimore School of Law Legal Studies Research Paper, 2019
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5. What's in a Name? The Semantics of Migration and Its Policy Implications
By Nguh Nwei Asanga Fon, Eastern Mediterranean University, Students
Posted: August 13, 2019
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6. Regulating the Border
By Eunice Lee, University of California, Berkeley, College of Letters & Science
Maryland Law Review, Forthcoming
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7. What's in a Name? The Semantics of Migration and Its Policy Implications
By Nguh Nwei Asanga Fon, Eastern Mediterranean University
Posted: August 9, 2019
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8. Immigration vs. Poverty: Causal Impact on Demand for Redistribution in a Survey Experiment
By Andrea Martinangeli, Max Planck Institute for Tax Law and Public Finance and Lisa Windsteiger, Max Planck Institute for Tax Law and Public Finance
Working Paper of the Max Planck Institute for Tax Law and Public Finance No. 2019-13
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9. You Name it: On the Cross-Border Regulation of Names
By Sharon Shakargy, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Faculty of Law
Forthcoming: American Journal of Comparative Law
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10. Suicide by Democracy - An Obituary for America and the World
By Michael Starks, Independent
Suicide by Democracy - An Obituary for America and the World) by Michael Starks, Reality Press, Las Vegas, NV USA 2019
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Latest posts from the Immigration Law Professors' Blog

1. California Immigration Consultants Act (AB 1753): Protecting Vulnerable Immigrants From Unscrupulous Providers of "Legal Advice"
August 22, 2019
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2. Trump Administration Announces New Rule to "Implement" the Flores Settlement
August 21, 2019
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3. Supreme Court Immigration News
August 20, 2019
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4. Environmental Refugees? Rethinking What’s in a Name
August 20, 2019
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5. The Empire Strikes Back (Again): Trump administration tightens rules for immigrant work permits
August 20, 2019
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6. More than 40 charged in federal court from Mississippi ICE raid, but no company officials
August 19, 2019
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7. Immigration Enforcement Expanding Its Use of Mass Surveillance
August 18, 2019
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8. Ninth Circuit Panel Fractures Over National Injunctions With Trump’s Latest Asylum Order
August 16, 2019
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9. Immigration Enforcement Expanding Its Use of Mass Surveillance
August 18, 2019
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10. Educators Supporting Immigrant Families
August 18, 2019
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11. GPS tracking of immigrants in ICE raids troubles advocates
August 16, 2019
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12. The Venezuelan Refugee Crisis
August 16, 2019
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13. The New Nativists: Cordelia Scaife May and the funding of an anti-immigrant network
August 15, 2019
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14. San Francisco, Santa Clara counties file first lawsuit over Trump 'public charge' rule
August 14, 2019
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15. Publicly Charged: A Critical Examination of Immigrant Public Benefit Restrictions
By Cori Alonso-Yoder
August 14, 2019
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16. Information on the Special Symposium: Facing Immigration Detention
August 13, 2019
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17. Public charge rule finalized, soon to take effect
August 12, 2019
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18. Ankle monitors and informants: How ICE chose the 7 Mississippi food plants to raid
August 11, 2019
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19. Immigration Enforcement Under President Trump: Undocumented Workers, Not Their Employers, Subject to Law Enforcement
August 10, 2019
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New from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

Recruiting Immigrant Workers: Canada 2019
August 13, 2019
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Highly Educated Immigrants: Economic Contributions and Implications for Public Policy
By Steven Globerman
Fraser Institute, July 23, 2019
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Can’t Go it Alone: Immigration Is Key to Canada’s Growth Strategy
By Aimee McArthur-Gupta, Kareem El-Assal, and Ali Bajwa
The Conference Board of Canada, May 3, 2019
[link removed]'tGoItAlone_BR.pdf?utm_source=E-mail+Updates&utm_campaign=cf44479ffe-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2019_08_22_11_56&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_7dc4c5d977-cf44479ffe-45126453

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Skilled Labor Mobility and Migration: Challenges and Opportunities for the ASEAN Economic Community
By Elisabetta Gentile

Edward Elgar Pub., 320 pp.

Hardcover, ISBN: 178811616X, $79.99
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Paperback, ISBN: 1108731775, $28.99
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Kindle, 212 pp., ASIN: B07VBNPCD8, $23.00

Book Description: Regional integration plays an important role in the advance of economic and social development across many parts of the world. Generating growth and expanding markets, it boosts productivity through the exchange of ideas, technologies, and human resources. This book explores the key vision of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN): fostering the free flow of goods, services, investment, and skilled labor in order to establish a globally competitive region with a single market and production base.

Bringing together contributions from renowned scholars in their respective fields, this book takes stock of the trends and patterns of skilled labor migration in the ASEAN, examining the existing literature and adding to it with unique insights drawn from original case studies and policy simulations. Identifying the challenges posed by recent significant changes, this book also looks to the future, to identify potential policy responses. The contributions dispel a common assumption that skill mobility is a zero-sum game, and instead contend that it can be mutually beneficial for both sides.

With rigorous quantitative analysis, this book will be a useful tool for both policy practitioners and policymakers as well as for researchers and students of international development, economics, and Asian studies.

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The Unsettling of Europe: How Migration Reshaped a Continent
By Peter Gatrell

Basic Books, 576 pp.

Hardcover, ISBN: 0465093612, $35.00
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Kindle, 71659 KB, ASIN: B07H28QJF5, $19.99

Book Description: Migration is perhaps the most pressing issue of our time, and it has completely decentered European politics in recent years. But as we consider the current refugee crisis, acclaimed historian Peter Gatrell reminds us that the history of Europe has always been one of people on the move.

The end of World War II left Europe in a state of confusion with many Europeans virtually stateless. Later, as former colonial states gained national independence, colonists and their supporters migrated to often-unwelcoming metropoles. The collapse of communism in 1989 marked another fundamental turning point.

Gatrell places migration at the center of post-war European history, and the aspirations of migrants themselves at the center of the story of migration. This is an urgent history that will reshape our understanding of modern Europe.

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Social Work with Refugees, Asylum Seekers and Migrants: Theory and Skills for Practice
By Lauren Wroe, Rachel Larkin, Reima Ana Maglajlic, et al.

Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 296 pp.

Paperback, ISBN: 1785923447, $29.95
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Kindle, 1043 KB, ASIN: 1785923447, 298 pp., $28.45

Book Description: Mass-migration, conflict and poverty are now persistent features of our globalised world. This reference book for social workers and service providers offers constructive ideas for practice within an inter-disciplinary framework.

Each chapter speaks to a skill and knowledge area that is key to this work, bringing together myriad voices from across disciplines, interspersed with the vital perspectives of asylum seekers, refugees and migrants themselves. The book discusses the specific challenges faced when working in the community, and where people have suffered torture, in the context of social work practiced from an ethical value-base.

Staying up to date with the latest developments in policy; and addressing key specific skills needed to work with people affected by borders, this book is a valuable resource for both practitioners and students.

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Precarious Hope: Migration and the Limits of Belonging in Turkey
By Ayse Parla

Stanford University Press, 256 pp.

Hardcover, ISBN: 1503608107, $90.00
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Paperback, ISBN: 150360943X, $28.00
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Kindle, 942 KB, ASIN: B07V4FYL76, 305 pp., $28.00

Book Description: There are more than 700,000 Bulgaristanli migrants residing in Turkey. Immigrants from Bulgaria who are ethnically Turkish, they assume certain privileges because of these ethnic ties, yet access to citizenship remains dependent on the whims of those in power. Through vivid accounts of encounters with the police and state bureaucracy, of nostalgic memories of home and aspirations for a more secure life in Turkey, Precarious Hope explores the tensions between ethnic privilege and economic vulnerability and rethinks the limits of migrant belonging among those for whom it is intimated and promised but never guaranteed.

In contrast to the typical focus on despair, Ayse Parla studies the hopefulness of migrants. Turkish immigration policies have worked in lockstep with national aspirations for ethnic, religious, and ideological conformity, offering Bulgaristanli migrants an advantage over others. Their hope is the product of privilege and an act of dignity and perseverance. It is also a tool of the state, reproducing a migration regime that categorizes some as desirable and others as foreign and dispensable. Through the experiences of the Bulgaristanli, Precarious Hope speaks to the global predicament in which increasing numbers of people are forced to manage both cultivation of hope and relentless anxiety within structures of inequality.

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Ethiopian Migrant Domestic Workers: Migrant Agency and Social Change
By Bina Fernandez

Palgrave Pivot, 156 pp.

Hardcover, ISBN: 3030240541, $59.99
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Kindle, 415 KB, ASIN: B07W7XK2SF, $56.99

Book Description: This book tells the stories of the Ethiopian women who migrate to work as domestic workers in the Middle East. Drawing on qualitative research in Ethiopia, Lebanon and Kuwait, the author reveals how women’s aspirations to migrate are constituted within unequal gendered structures of opportunity in Ethiopia and asks us to consider how gender, race, class and nationality intersect in the construction of migrant subjectivities and agency. By analysing the impact of migration on social reproduction both in Ethiopia and the destination countries, the book offers fresh empirical and theoretical insights into the largest stream of women’s autonomous international migration from Africa.

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Australia, Migration and Empire: Immigrants in a Globalised World
By Philip Payton and Andrekos Varnava

Palgrave Macmillan, 319 pp.

Hardcover, ISBN: 3030223884, $119.99
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Kindle, 6402 KB, ASIN: B07WHGSZJD, $84.99

Book Description: This edited collection explores how migrants played a major role in the creation and settlement of the British Empire, by focusing on a series of Australian case studies. Despite their shared experiences of migration and settlement, migrants nonetheless often exhibited distinctive cultural identities, which could be deployed for advantage. Migration established global mobility as a defining feature of the Empire. Ethnicity, class and gender were often powerful determinants of migrant attitudes and behaviour. This volume addresses these considerations, illuminating the complexity and diversity of the British Empire’s global immigration story. Since 1788, the propensity of the populations of Britain and Ireland to immigrate to Australia varied widely, but what this volume highlights is their remarkable diversity in character and impact. The book also presents the opportunities that existed for other immigrant groups to demonstrate their loyalty as members of the (white)
Australian community, along with notable exceptions which demonstrated the limits of this inclusivity.

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Comparative Migration Studies
Vol. 7, No. 34, August 16, 2019
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Latest Articles:

The momentum of transnational social spaces in Mexico-US-migration
By Ludger Pries
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Ethnic and Racial Studies
Vol. 42, No. 13, September 2019
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Selected articles:

Revisiting the Asian second-generation advantage
By Van C. Tran, Jennifer Lee, and Tiffany J. Huang
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Critical comment on “Revisiting the Asian second-generation advantage”
By Lawrence J. Zigerell
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Revisiting the Asian second-generation advantage: response to comment by L.J Zigerell
By Van C. Tran, Jennifer Lee, and Tiffany J. Huang
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IZA Journal of Migration
Vol. 10, No. 2, August 2019
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Latest articles:

Migration and Those Left Behind
By Rachel Gisselquist and Finn Tarp
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Journal on Migration and Human Security
Vol. 9, No. 2, June 2019
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Selected article:

Fixing What’s Most Broken in the US Immigration System: A Profile of the Family Members of US Citizens and Lawful Permanent Residents Mired in Multiyear Backlogs
By Donald Kerwin and Robert Warren
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The Effects of Immigration Enforcement on Faith-Based Organizations: An Analysis of the FEER Survey
By Donald Kerwin and Mike Nicholson
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Latino Studies
Vol. 17, No. 2, June 2018
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Selected articles:

Queer in a legal sense: Negation and negotiation of citizenship in Boutilier v. Immigration and Naturalization Service and Arturo Islas’s The Rain God
By José A. de la Garza Valenzuela
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Gendering deportation, policy violence, and Latino/a family precarity
By Beth Baker and Alejandra Marchevsky
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Docile, criminal, and upwardly mobile?: Visual news framing of Mexican migrants and the logics of neoliberal multiculturalism
By Kristen Hill Maher and Jesse Elias
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Imaginarte: Unaccompanied refugee minors tell their stories of belonging through photography
By Esteban Loustaunau
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The Centre on Migration, Policy, and Society (COMPAS)
Summer 2019
[link removed]

Acceptable in the EU? Why some immigration restrictionists support European Union mobility
By Scott Blinder and Yvonni Markaki
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Labour market effects of demographic shifts and migration in OECD countries
By Frédéric Docquier, Zovanga L. Kone, Aaditya Mattoo, and Çaglar Özden
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Municipal Activism on Irregular Migrants: The Framing of Inclusive Approaches at the Local Level
By Sarah Spencer and Nicola Delvino
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