'Norman makes a convincing case for rethinking and retheorizing the role of so-called 'transit countries' … Introducing the concept of 'strategic indifference', and constructing a detailed comparison based on a wealth of original fieldwork, Norman demonstrates why governments of the Global South … should be viewed as central and intentional actors in a complex relationship between them, the migrants, and the many international organizations involved in migration and refugee governance.' Laurie Brand, University of Southern California