This book examines migration in East Asia and Europe, exploring the circumstances of refugees, migrants and the role of law in order to explore how future flows of people can be better handled to the benefit of all concerned.Through discussions of the overall patterns of movement be they documented, undocumented, planned or unplanned, the book highlights the key problems facing those making these journeys, identifying typical responses to these issues through politics and policy. Utilising the records of flows of people in Europe and East Asia the book reveals the ways in which state elites have variously sought to control such movement. By demonstrating that there is no overarching international framework within which these issues can be tackled – not ideas, nor institutions or popular opinion – it concludes that there will always be differences of interpretation of nominally common responsibilities, just as there will always be flows of people.Revealing that patterns of movements are not simple whilst exploring the concerns that individual people, state authorities and international bodies express, this book will be a valuable resource to students and scholars of Asian Studies, Migration Studies and Politics.
Aifen Xing is a Professor of International Law at Beijing Normal University, China.Peter W. Preston is an Emeritus Professor of Political Sociology at the University of Birmingham, UK.
1. Movement: Age Old, Familiar 2. Law: Ordering the Movements 3. Migration in East Asia and China 4. Population Movements in China 5. Migration and the European Union 6. Population Movements in Britain 7. Recent law in East Asia and China 8. Recent law in the European Union 9. Migration: Lessons from East Asia and Europe 10. Migration Today