[link removed] Share ([link removed])
[link removed] https%3A%2F%2Fmailchi.mp%2Fcis%2Fimmigration-reading-121219 Tweet ([link removed] https%3A%2F%2Fmailchi.mp%2Fcis%2Fimmigration-reading-121219)
[link removed] Forward ([link removed])
** Immigration Reading, 12/12/19
------------------------------------------------------------
Support the Center for Immigration Studies by donating on line here: [link removed] ([link removed])
ATTN Federal employees: The Center's Combined Federal Campaign number is 10298.
GOVERNMENT DOCUMENTS
1. (#1) DHS OIG report on the lack of technology needed to track separated migrant families
2. (#2) GAO reports on arrests, detentions, and removals, and immigration-related prosecutions
3. (#3) House testimony on the impact of immigration policies on children
4. (#4) FRB-Boston report on the possible role of immigration in population replacement in northern New England
5. (#5) Canada: Education levels of immigrants in Canada and the US, and public pensions for low-income immigrants
6. (#6) U.K.: Quarterly migration statistics
7. (#7) Belgium: Naturalization statistics
8. (#8) Czech Rep.: Population statistics
REPORTS, ARTICLES, ETC.
9. (#9) SCOTUSblog analysis of Guerrero-Lasprilla v. Barr and Ovalles v. Barr
10. (#10) TRAC report on ICE detention of immigrants with serious criminal convictions
11. (#11) New working paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research
12. (#12) Three new features from the Migration Policy Institute
13. (#13) Three new discussion papers from the Institute for the Study of Labor
14. (#14) Eight new papers from the Social Science Research Network
15. (#15) Thirteen new postings from the Immigration Law Professors' Blog
16. (#16) "How Can I Get My Papers? Lessons From a Decade of Online Legal Intakes for Undocumented Immigrants"
17. (#17) "Mixed Migration Review 2019"
18. (#18) European Policy Centre report on building a new European consensus on migration
19. (#19) IOM World Migration Report, 2020
20. (#20) U.K.: New briefing paper from MigrationWatch
21. (#21) : Three new features from the Oxford Refugee Studies Centre
BOOKS
22. (#22) Undoing Homogeneity in the Nordic Region: Migration, Difference and the Politics of Solidarity
23. (#23) Bordering
24. (#24) Cultures of Transnationality in European Migration: Subjectivity, Family and Inequality
25. (#25) Migration, Borders and Citizenship: Between Policy and Public Spheres
26. (#26) Migration and the Refugee Dissensus in Europe: Borders, Security and Austerity
JOURNALS
27. (#27) Comparative Migration Studies
28. (#28) International Migration
29. (#29) Journal of Ethnic and Racial Studies
30. (#30) Journal on Migration and Human Security
31. (#31) Journal of Refugee Studies
********
********
DHS Lacked Technology Needed to Successfully Account for Separated Migrant Families
DHS OIG Report No. OIG-20-06, November 25, 2019
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
New from the General Accountability Office
Immigration Enforcement: Arrests, Detentions, and Removals, and Issues Related to Selected Populations
GAO-20-36, December 5, 2019
Report: [link removed]
Highlights: [link removed]
Immigration Enforcement: Immigration-Related Prosecutions Increased from 2017 to 2018 in Response to U.S. Attorney General's Direction
GAO-20-172, December 3, 2019
Report: [link removed]
Highlights: [link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Wednesday, December 4, 2019
House Committee on Education and Labor
[link removed]
Growing Up in Fear: How the Trump Administration’s Immigration Policies Are Harming Children
Opening statements:
Chairman Bobby Scott
[link removed]
Witness testimony:
Gabriela Barajas-Gonzalez
Assistant Professor, Department of Population Health
NYU School of Medicine
Mountainside, NJ
[link removed]
Pedro Martinez
Superintendent
San Antonio Independent School District
San Antonio, TX
[link removed]
Mark H. Metcalf
Former Immigration Judge
Lancaster, KY
[link removed]
Olanrewaju Falusi
Pediatrician and Executive Committee Member, American Academy of Pediatrics’ Council on Immigrant Child and Family Health
Past President, American Academy of Pediatrics' D.C. Chapter
Washington, D.C.
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Aging and Declining Populations in Northern New England: Is There a Role for Immigration?
By Riley Sullivan
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Research Paper, July 17, 2019
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Over-education among university-educated immigrants in Canada and the United States
Statistics Canada, December 3, 2019
[link removed]
Examining the effect of public pension benefits on the low income of senior immigrants
December 3, 2019
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Migration Statistics Quarterly Report: November 2019
U.K. Office for National Statistics, November 28, 2019
[link removed]
Summary: In the year ending June 2019, long-term international migration continued to add to the UK population, as an estimated 212,000 more people moved to the UK with an intention to stay for 12 months or more than left the UK (net migration). Over the year, 609,000 people moved to the UK (immigration) and 397,000 people left the UK (emigration).
Long-term net migration, immigration and emigration have remained broadly stable since the end of 2016.
Since 2016, there has been a decrease in immigration for work; over the same period, immigration for study has been gradually increasing.
There are different patterns for EU and non-EU migration (note from March 2016, no preliminary adjustments were applied to EU migration estimates; as such, we have made our best assessment based on all the available evidence):
EU net migration has fallen since 2016, although more EU citizens arrive long-term than leave; this is because of a gradual increase in EU citizens leaving as well as a decrease in those coming to the UK over the same time period.
The fall in immigration for work has mainly been because of a decrease in EU citizens coming to the UK looking for work, particularly those from the EU8; for non-EU citizens, all available data sources have shown increases in the numbers coming to the UK for work since 2014.
Non-EU net migration has gradually increased since 2013, as immigration has risen and emigration remained broadly stable for this group.
The rise in non-EU immigration is mainly because of a gradual increase in those coming to the UK for formal study, a trend reflected in all available data sources with sponsored study visa applications for universities at the highest level on record.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
3,475 naturalisations in September
Statistics Belgium, December 5,2019
[link removed]
Summary: In September 2019, 3,475 persons obtained the Belgian nationality. The main countries of origin of naturalised Belgians in September are Morocco, Romania, Afghanistan, the United Kingdom and Poland.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Population change - 1st-3rd quarter of 2019
Number of live births slightly decreased year-on-year
Statistics Czech Republic, December 12, 2019
[link removed]
Excerpt: The population of the Czech Republic increased by 31.4 thousand to 10.68 million persons during the first three quarters of 2019. Most increase was due to international migration. Both the number of live births and deaths slightly decreased year-on-year. The number of marriages also went down in comparison with the first three quarters of the previous year.
According to the preliminary statistical balance the population of the Czech Republic increased by 31.4 thousand to 10.68 million persons in the period from 1 January to 30 September. Ninety-five per cent of the increase was caused by international migration, as the number of immigrants exceeded the number of emigrants by 29.9 thousand. Another 1.5 thousand inhabitants was added by natural change.
. . .
Due to international migration, the population of the Czech Republic increased by 29.9 thousand persons during the first three quarters of 2019. The international migration flows of both immigrants and emigrants increased year-on-year; the net migration rose by 2.2 thousand in the year-on-year comparison. A total of 49.2 thousand people immigrated to the Czech Republic from abroad and 19.3 thousand people emigrated from the Czech Republic. Foreign migration was continued to dominate by nationals of Ukraine, who prevailed among both immigrants and emigrants, and they also reached the highest positive net migration (13.1 thousand). The second highest was the net migration of Slovak nationals (3.2 thousand). Then the migration balance of Romanian nationals (1.5 thousand) and Russian nationals (1.4 thousand) followed. The migration balance of Czechs was negative (-1.3 thousand).
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Argument analysis: Justices consider federal courts’ statutory authority to review decisions from the Board of Immigration Appeals
By Kit Johnson
SCOTUSblog.com, December 10, 2019
[link removed]
Excerpt: On Monday, the Supreme Court heard oral argument in the consolidated cases of Guerrero-Lasprilla v. Barr and Ovalles v. Barr. These cases focus on the meaning of a single statutory provision: 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(D).
The parties agree the statute means that U.S. courts of appeals are authorized to consider “questions of law” raised in appeals by noncitizens convicted of certain crimes from decisions by the Board of Immigration Appeals regarding their removal from the United States. They also agree that courts of appeals have no jurisdiction to consider other questions raised by such cases. Finally, the parties agree that Congress drafted this statute in response to the Supreme Court’s decision in Immigration & Naturalization Service v. St. Cyr, in which the court warned that preventing review of legal questions in this type of appeal would create “substantial constitutional questions.”
Where the parties diverge is in their understanding of the breadth of the phrase “questions of law.”
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
New from the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, Syracuse University
ICE Detains Fewer Immigrants with Serious Criminal Convictions Under Trump Administration
December 6, 2019
[link removed]
Excerpt: While the total number of detainees with a criminal record has been fairly constant, TRAC found that the composition has been shifting. The number of individuals convicted of serious felonies fell from between 7,500 and 8,000 in 2017 to just above 6,000 in April of this year. Those convicted of serious felonies have been replaced by an increasing number of detainees who have committed at most misdemeanors - what ICE labels as Level 3 offenses - such as unlawful entry or traffic-related violations.
As shown in more detail in Table 1 below, ICE's data reveal that the fraction of detainees that ICE classifies as least serious, or Level 3 offenders, has climbed steadily from just over 6,000 (or 39 percent of the total detainees with criminal convictions in 2015) to nearly 9,500 (or 54 percent) in 2019. At the same time, detainees classified as serious Level 1 offenders declined from nearly 7,500 (or 47 percent) under the Obama administration to around 6,000 (or 34 percent) during the Trump administration.
The number of Level 2 detainees is remarkably unchanging across these four years, hovering somewhat above 2,000 detainees, or between 12 and 14 percent of all detainees with criminal convictions, on any given day.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
New from the National Bureau of Economic Research
The Effects of Immigration on the Economy: Lessons from the 1920s Border Closure
By Ran Abramitzky, Philipp Ager, Leah Platt Boustan, Elior Cohen, and Casper W. Hansen
NBER Working Paper No. 26536, December 2019
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
New from the Migration Policy Institute
Refugee Sponsorship Programs: A Global State of Play and Opportunities for Investment
By Susan Fratzke, Lena Kainz, Hanne Beirens, Emma Dorst, and Jessica Bolter
MPI Policy Brief, December 2019
[link removed]
Top 10 Migration Issues of 2019
Migration Information Source, December 9, 2019
[link removed]
Temporary Visa Holders in the United States
By Brittany Blizzard and Jeanne Batalova
Migration Information Source Spotlight, December 5, 2019
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
New from the Institute for the Study of Labor
The Social Preferences of the Native Inhabitants, and the Decision How Many Asylum Seekers to Admit
By Oded Stark, Marcin Jakubek, and Krzysztof Szczygielski
IZA Discussion Paper No. 12803, November 2019
[link removed]
Refugees' and Irregular Migrants' Self-Selection into Europe: Who Migrates Where?
By Cevat Giray Aksoy and Panu Poutvaara
IZA Discussion Paper No. 12800, November 2019
[link removed]
The Effect of E-Verify Laws on Crime
By Brandyn Churchill, Andrew Dickinson, Taylor Mackay, and Joseph J. Sabia
IZA Discussion Paper No. 12798, November 2019
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
New from the Social Science Research Network
1. Immigration Demand and the Boomerang of Deportation Policies
By Christian Ambrosius, Free University of Berlin (FUB) Institute of Latin American Studies and David A. Leblang, University of Virginia College of Arts and Sciences
Posted: December 9, 2019
[link removed]
[link removed]
2. Deporting Chevron: Why the Attorney General’s Immigration Decisions Should not Receive Chevron Deference
By Richard Frankel, Drexel University Thomas R. Kline School of Law
Drexel University Thomas R. Kline School of Law Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2019-W-02
[link removed]
3. Becoming Unconventional: Constricting the 'Particular Social Group' Ground for Asylum
By Fatma E. Marouf, Texas A&M University School of Law
North Carolina Journal of International Law, Vol. 44, pp. 487-517, 2019
Texas A&M University School of Law Legal Studies Research Paper No. 19-68
[link removed]
[link removed]
4. Reliance Interests and Future DACA Litigation
By Geoffrey A. Hoffman, University of Houston Law Center
Posted: December 4, 2019
[link removed]
[link removed]
5. Does Birthplace Diversity Affect Economic Complexity? Cross-Country Evidence
By Dany Bahar, Brookings Institution; Harvard University Center for International Development (CID); Hillel Rapoport, Paris School of Economics (PSE); and Riccardo Turati, Catholic University of Louvain (UCL) School of Economic and Social Research (IRES)
CESifo Working Paper No. 7950
[link removed]
[link removed]
6. Taxation as a Means of Migration Control: The Case of Hungary
By Luc Leboeuf, Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology and Alice Pirlot, University of Oxford Said Business School; Catholic University of Louvain (UCL)
Luc Leboeuf & Alice Pirlot, "Taxation as a Means of Migration Control: The Case of Hungary" (2019) 47(3) Intertax, pp. 291-297.
[link removed]
[link removed]
7. Aspiring Americans Thrown Out in the Cold: The Discriminatory Use of False Testimony Allegations to Deny Naturalization
By Nermeen Arastu, CUNY School of Law
66 UCLA Law Rview 1078, Forthcoming
[link removed]
[link removed]
8. The Comprehensive Wealth of Older Immigrants and Natives
Social Security Bulletin. 79(4): 25-68, 2019
By David A. Love and Lucie Schmidt, Williams College - Department of Economics
[link removed]
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Latest posts from the Immigration Law Professors' Blog
1. Joe Biden Announces His Immigration Program
December 12, 2019
. . .
[link removed]
2. Reentry Services for the Removed by Katie Tinto
December 12, 2019
. . .
[link removed]
3. Second appeals court backs lifting injunction on Trump 'public charge' rule
December 10, 2019
. . .
[link removed]
4. Ninth Circuit Stays Injunction of Trump Public Charge Rule
December 8, 2019
. . .
[link removed]
5. Trump is trying to make it too expensive for poor American immigrants to stay
December 8, 2019
. . .
[link removed]
6. Immigrants' access to legal assistance further diminished by EOIR memo
December 7, 2019
. . .
[link removed]
7. ICE bought state driver's license records to track undocumented immigrants
December 4 , 2019
. . .
[link removed]
8. How McKinsey Helped the Trump Administration Detain and Deport Immigrants
December 4, 2019
. . .
[link removed]
9. From the Bookshelves: Perchance to DREAM: A Legal and Political History of the DREAM Act and DACA
By Michael A. Olivas
December 3, 2019
. . .
[link removed]
10. Is OPT in peril? Colleges sign amicus brief opposing end of OPT
December 2, 2019
. . .
[link removed]
11. A Fact Worth Remembering: Half of Undocumented Immigrants are Visa Overstays
December 2, 2019
. . .
[link removed]
12. DHS Lacked Technology Needed to Successfully Account for Separated Migrant Families
December 1, 2019
. . .
[link removed]
13. States Push Back Against ICE Courthouse Arrests
November 30, 2019
. . .
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
How Can I Get My Papers? Lessons From a Decade of Online Legal Intakes for Undocumented Immigrants
Immigrants Rising, December 2019
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Mixed Migration Review 2019
Zolberg Institute, November 2019
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
From Tampere 20 to Tampere 2.0: Towards a New European Consensus on Migration
By Philippe De Bruycker, Marie De Somer, and Jean-Louis De Brouwer
European Policy Centre, November 2019
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
World Migration Report, 2020
International Organization for Migration, December 2019
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
An Australian-style cap on work permits
MigrationWatch UK, December 3, 2019
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
New from the Oxford Refugee Studies Centre
Transnationalism
By Derya Ozkul
SAGE Publishing, December 1, 2019
[link removed]
The Duties of Refugees
By Matthew J Gibney
The Political Philosophy of Refuge, November 25, 2019
[link removed]
Humanitarian Versus Development Aid for Refugees: Evidence from a Regression Discontinuity Design
By Claire MacPherson and Olivier Sterck
Centre for the Study of African Economies Working Paper WPS/2019-15, October 30, 2019
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Undoing Homogeneity in the Nordic Region: Migration, Difference and the Politics of Solidarity
By Suvi Keskinen, Unnur Dís Skaptadóttir, and Mari Toivanen
Routledge, 224 pp.
Hardcover, ISBN: 1138564273, $101.63
[link removed]
Kindle, 1054 KB, ASIN: B07S1Q7X32, $57.95
Book Description: This book critically engages with dominant ideas of cultural homogeneity in the Nordic countries and contests the notion of homogeneity as a crucial determinant of social cohesion and societal security. Showing how national identities in the Nordic region have developed historically around notions of cultural and racial homogeneity, it exposes the varied histories of migration and the longstanding presence of ethnic minorities and indigenous people in the region that are ignored in dominant narratives. With attention to the implications of notions of homogeneity for the everyday lives of migrants and racialised minorities in the region, as well as the increasing securitisation of those perceived not to be part of the homogenous nation, this volume provides detailed analyses of how welfare state policies, media, and authorities seek to manage and govern cultural, religious, and racial differences. With studies of national minorities, indigenous people and migrants in the
analysis of homogeneity and difference, it sheds light on the agency of minorities and the intertwining of securitisation policies with notions of culture, race, and religion in the government of difference. As such it will appeal to scholars and students in social sciences and humanities with interests in race and ethnicity, migration, postcolonialism, Nordic studies, multiculturalism, citizenship, and belonging.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Bordering
By Nira Yuval-Davis, Georgie Wemyss, and Kathryn Cassidy
Polity, 240 pp.
Hardcover, ISBN: 150950494X, $58.76
[link removed]
Paperback, ISBN: 1509504958, $18.09
[link removed]
Kindle, 543 KB, ASIN: B07SYS5PV2, $17.19
Book Description: Controlling national borders has once again become a key concern of contemporary states and a highly contentious issue in social and political life. But controlling borders is about much more than patrolling territorial boundaries at the edges of states: it now comprises a multitude of practices that take place at different levels, some at the edges of states and some in the local contexts of everyday life – in workplaces, in hospitals, in schools – which, taken together, construct, reproduce and contest borders and the rights and obligations associated with belonging to a nation-state.
This book is a systematic exploration of the practices and processes that now define state bordering and the role it plays in national and global governance. Based on original research, it goes well beyond traditional approaches to the study of migration and racism, showing how these processes affect all members of society, not just the marginalized others. The uncertainties arising from these processes mean that more and more people find themselves living in grey zones, excluded from any form of protection and often denied basic human rights.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Cultures of Transnationality in European Migration: Subjectivity, Family and Inequality
By Karolina Barglowski
Routledge, 236 pp.
Hardcover, ISBN: 1138557943, $105.59
[link removed]
Kindle, 1487 KB, ASIN: B07SR5XQ4N, $57.95
Book Description: Transnational mobility in the EU has become a key factor for supranational integration, equal life chances and socioeconomic prosperity. This book explores the cultural and social patterns that shape people’s migration, the historical and contemporary patterns of their movement, and the manifold consequences of their migration for themselves and their families.
Exploring the links between social and spatial mobility, the book draws attention to the complexity of moving and staying, as ways in which social inequalities are shaped and reinforced. Grounded in research conducted in Germany and Poland, the book develops the concept of "cultures of transnationality" to analytically frame the variety of expectations involved in migration, and how they shape migration dispositions, opportunities, and outcomes.
Cultures of Transnationality in European Migration will be of broad interest to scholars and students of transnational migration, European development, cultural sociology, intersectionality and subjectivity. Specifically, it will appeal to scholars interested in the cultural ramifications of moving and staying as well as those interested in the interplay of gender, ethnicity and class, in the making of social inequality.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Migration, Borders and Citizenship: Between Policy and Public Spheres
By Maurizio Ambrosini, Manlio Cinalli, and David Jacobson
Palgrave Macmillan, 309 pp.
Hardcover, ISBN: 3030221563, $97.74
[link removed]
Kindle, 4878 KB, ASIN: B07WWBCMQM, $20.52
Book Description: TThis edited collection goes beyond the limited definition of borders as simply dividing lines across states, to uncover another, yet related, type of division: one that separates policies and institutions from public debate and contestation.
Bringing together expertise from established and emerging academics, it examines the fluid and varied borderscape across policy and the public domains. The chapters encompass a wide range of analyses that covers local, national and transnational frameworks, policies and private actors. In doing so, Migration, Borders and Citizenship reveals the tensions between border control and state economic interests; legal frameworks designed to contain criminality and solidarity movements; international conventions, national constitutions and local migration governance; and democratic and exclusive constructions of citizenship.
This novel approach to the politics of borders will appeal to sociologists, political scientists and geographers working in the fields of migration, citizenship, urban geography and human rights; in addition to students and scholars of security studies and international relations.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Migration and the Refugee Dissensus in Europe: Borders, Security and Austerity
By Nicos Trimikliniotis
Routledge, 256 pp.
Hardcover, ISBN: 1138335118, $155.00
[link removed]
Kindle, 4452 KB, ASIN: B07YCY2Z3Q, $57.95
Book Description: This book provides an explanation for the fundamental disagreement pertaining to immigration and asylum in Europe.
Since the collapse of consensus with the end of the Cold War, immigration and asylum have increasingly emerged as a central socio-political issue in Europe. The present work attempts to move beyond the complexity of ‘managing’ migratory flows by focusing on the most daunting issues arising from the response to the ‘refugee crisis’ in Europe. This debate is intimately connected to borders, security, belonging, citizenship and labour precarity/inequality. The book addresses some crucial dimensions related to the migration and asylum dissensus by providing an integrated frame of analysis from the point of view of resistance, rather than that of power. It connects notions of belonging and the migrant integration with the processes of de-democratisation, racist populism, citizenship and authoritarian migration regimes, and contributes towards a theory of the asylum and immigration dissensus by examining the potential for transition towards a society of equality and rights. The author proposes
that the encounter(s) with surplus populations in Europe, which result in the multiplication of liminal regimes as well as spaces for resistance, generates potential for social imaginaries, promising a society unimaginable in previous epochs.
This book will be of much interest to students of migration and border studies, global governance, European politics and International Relations.
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Comparative Migration Studies
Vol. 7, Nos. 45-47, December 2, 11, 2019
[link removed]
Latest Articles:
Gendered dynamics of transnational social protection
By Başak Bilecen, Karolina Barglowski, Thomas Faist, and Eleonore Kofman
[link removed]
The impact of externalized migration governance on Turkey: technocratic migration governance and the production of differentiated legal status
By Ayşen Üstübici
[link removed]
Contested externalisation: responses to global inequalities
By Thomas Faist
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
International Migration
Vol. 57, No. 6, December 2019
[link removed]
Articles:
SPECIAL ISSUE: THE GLOBAL COMPACT FOR SAFE, ORDERLY AND REGULAR MIGRATION AND THE GLOBAL COMPACT ON REFUGEES
The Global Compacts on Refugees and for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration: Introduction to the Special Issue
By Elizabeth E. Ferris and Susan F. Martin
[link removed]
The Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration: What's Next
By António Vitorino
[link removed]
The Global Compact on Refugees: A Historic Achievement
By Filippo Grandi
[link removed]
HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE NON‐BINDING NATURE OF THE COMPACTS
Not Bound but Committed: Operationalizing the Global Compact on Refugees
By Geoff Gilbert
[link removed]
From Zero to Hero? An analysis of the human rights protections within the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (GCM)
By Elspeth Guild, Tugba Basaran, and Kathryn Allinson
[link removed]
Protecting and Benchmarking Migrants’ Rights: An Analysis of the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration
By Justin Gest, Ian M. Kysel, and Tom K. Wong
[link removed]
POLICY ISSUES IN BOTH COMPACTS
Labour Market Realism and the Global Compacts on Migration and Refugees
By Philip Martin and Martin Ruhs
[link removed]
Immigration Detention under the Global Compacts in the Light of Refugee and Human Rights Law Standards
By Izabella Majcher
[link removed]
Closing the Gap? Gender and the Global Compacts for Migration and Refugees
By Jenna L. Hennebry and Allison J. Petrozziello
[link removed]
Shortcomings and/or Missed Opportunities of the Global Compacts for the Protection of Forced Migrants
By Liliana Lyra, Jubilut Melissa, and Martins Casagrande
[link removed]
International Travel Security and the Global Compacts on Refugees and Migration
By Rey Koslowski
[link removed]
NEXUS BETWEEN HUMAN MOBILITY AND DEVELOPMENT
“The GCR and the Role of Development Actors with Refugees: A Game‐Changer, or More of the Same?”
By Sarah Deardorff Miller
[link removed]
STAKEHOLDERS: PARTICIPANTS IN DRAFTING AND RESPONSIBILITIES FOR IMPLEMENTATION
National Governance Frameworks in the Global Compact on Refugees: Dangers and Opportunities
By Emily E. Arnold‐Fernández
[link removed]
Share the Burden or Pass it on?
By Markus Rudolf
[link removed]
The Impact of GCR on Local Governments and Syrian Refugees in Turkey
By Başak Kale and Murat Erdoğan
[link removed]
Tokens or Stakeholders in Global Migration Governance? The Role of Affected Communities and Civil Society in the Global Compacts on Migration and Refugees
By Stefan Rother and Elias Steinhilper
[link removed]
REGIONAL PERSPECTIVES
Role of Regional Consultative Processes in the lead up to the Negotiations of Global Compact on Migration: The Case of Africa
By Olawale Maiyegun
[link removed]
The European Union and the Background of the Global Compacts
By Emma Martín Díaz Juan Pablo Aris Escarcena
[link removed]
The UN Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration: Its Impact on Asia
By Binod Khadria Narender Thakur Imelda Nicolas Takgon Lee Jigmin Yang Ychen Jang
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Journal of Ethnic and Racial Studies
Vol. 43, No. 3, January 2020
[link removed]
Issue in progress.
Articles:
Reflections and directions for research in refugee studies
By Alice Bloch
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Journal on Migration and Human Security
Online first, December 11, 2019
[link removed]
Selected article:
Putting Americans First: A Statistical Case for Encouraging Rather than Impeding and Devaluing US Citizenship
By Donald Kerwin and Robert Warren
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
********
Journal of Refugee Studies
Vol. 32, No. 4, December 2019
[link removed]
Articles:
‘What Does the Term Refugee Mean to You?’: Perspectives from Syrian Refugee Women in Lebanon
By Angela Gissi
[link removed]
Process in the Community, Detain Offshore or ‘Turn Back the Boats’? Predicting Australian Asylum-seeker Policy Support from False Beliefs, Prejudice and Political Ideology
By Lisa K Hartley, Joel R Anderson, and Anne Pedersen
[link removed]
Motherhood as Identity: African Refugee Single Mothers Working the Intersections
By Julian Grant and Pauline B Guerin
[link removed]
Syrian Refugees as Seasonal Migrant Workers: Re-Construction of Unequal Power Relations in Turkish Agriculture
By Deniz Pelek
[link removed]
An Examination of a University-based Refugee Speaker Series
By Dennis D Long, Cynthia H Geer, and Megan E Zarnitz
[link removed]
From Recipients of Aid to Shapers of Policies: Conceptualizing Government–United Nations Relations during the Syrian Refugee Crisis in Lebanon
By Carmen Geha and Joumana Talhouk
[link removed]
The Discursive Governance of Forced-Migration Management: The Turkish Shift from Reticence to Activism in Asia
By Umut Korkut
[link removed]
Assessing the Civil Society’s Role in Refugee Integration in Turkey: NGO-R as a New Typology
By Ulaş Sunata and Salіh Tosun
[link removed]
Return to Top (#top)
********
Visit Website (http://)
============================================================
** Facebook ([link removed])
** [link removed] ([link removed])
** Google Plus ([link removed])
** LinkedIn ([link removed])
** RSS ([link removed])
Copyright © 2019 Center for Immigration Studies, All rights reserved.
Our mailing address is:
Center for Immigration Studies
1629 K St., NW, Suite 600
Washington, DC 20006
USA
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can ** update your preferences ([link removed])
or ** unsubscribe from this list ([link removed])
.
** View this e-mail in your browser. ([link removed])
This is the Center for Immigration Studies CISNews e-mail list.