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Drawing together the work of leading researchers from various disciplines and backgrounds, this illuminating Research Handbook contributes to a revitalised understanding of migration governance. It introduces novel debates regarding how actors and institutions shape significant migration dynamics. This erudite Research Handbook features a systematic review of the analytical framework of global migration governance. Chapters identify and explain key institutions involved in global migration, focusing on changes in patterns and actor behaviours. Key actors explored in the Research Handbook include international organisations, migrant networks, civil society groups, smuggling cartels, religious transnational organisations, security firms and trade unions. Ultimately, it aims to contribute to a renewed understanding of migration drivers and proceedings. Students and advanced scholars of international relations and politics studying topics such as migration policy will find this thorough Research Handbook to be incredibly valuable. Experts and agents of international and non-government organisations will additionally find it to be beneficial.
Edited by Antoine Pécoud, Professor of Sociology, University Sorbonne Paris Nord and Institut Convergences Migrations and Hélène Thiollet, CNRS Researcher, CERI/Sciences Po, and Institut Convergences Migrations, France
Contents:1 Introduction: the institutions of global migration governance 1Antoine Pécoud and Hélène ThiolletPART I INTERGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS: THEAMBIGUITIES OF MULTILATERAL MIGRATIONGOVERNANCE2 Bringing about the ‘perfect storm’ in migration governance? A historyof the International Organization for Migration 19Elaine Lebon-McGregor3 Managing migration by encompassing the role of the state: the IOM andthe Migration Governance Framework 34Younes Ahouga4 UNHCR and the transformation of global refugee governance: the caseof refugee resettlement 50Adèle Garnier5 The global governance of labour mobility: the role of the InternationalLabour Organization 63Nicola Piper6 The migration and development nexus and international migrationmanagement: the role of the United Nations Development Programme 76Giulia Breda7 A humanitarian agency in global migration governance: theInternational Committee of the Red Cross’s migration policy and practice 89Miriam Bradley8 Regions and regional organisations in global migration governance 102Ine Lietaert and Antoine PécoudPART II INTERSECTIONS, CONVERSATIONS AND ARRANGEMENTSIN GLOBAL MIGRATION GOVERNANCE9 The emergence of a global migration policy conversation:a retrospective on two mandates of the United Nations SpecialRapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants (2011–2017) 119François Crépeau and Anna Purkey10 Global encounters: exploring the political foundations of globalmigration governance 132Stefan Rother, Hélène Thiollet and Catherine Wihtol de Wenden11 Making a global compact: the objectives and institutions of theMarrakesh Compact 146Elspeth Guild and Kathryn Allinson12 ‘Workers of the world unite’: unions and immigration, a global history 170Leo Lucassen13 At the crossroads of climate and migration governance: institutionalarrangements to address climate-induced migration 186François Gemenne14 The gendered governance of migration 196Laura Foley15 The governance of migrant smuggling and human trafficking:institutions and networks 214Anna Triandafyllidou and Letizia Palumbo16 Global migration governance: positionality, agency and impact of civilsociety 227Carl-Ulrik Schierup, Raúl Delgado Wise and Aleksandra ÅlundPART III FIFTY SHADES OF GOVERNANCE: FROM PUBLIC TOPRIVATE, FROM FORMAL TO INFORMAL17 Detention camps for foreigners and international agreements: twoinstitutions that shaped European migration history (1945–2020) 250Olivier Clochard18 Economic interests and EU border and migration control: from securityhindrances to market opportunities 263Damien Simonneau19 Migration and religious institutions: (re) arranging itineraries and imaginaries 279Sophie Bava20 The role of Church organisations in global migration governance 297Mélodie Beaujeu21 The governance of transnational care chains 312Rianne Mahon22 Promoting and restricting marriage migrations: when marriages are notsuch a private matter 327Hélène Le Bail23 Migration intermediation: revisiting the kafala (sponsorship system) inthe Gulf 341Claire Beaugrand and Hélène Thiollet24 The global ordering of remittance flows: formalisation, facilitation,funnelling and financialisation 357Anna Lindley25 From a de facto to a de jure role of local authorities in the governanceof international migration 377Thomas Lacroix26 ‘I know, therefore I (don’t) go’: the role of information in migrationdecision-making and irregular migration governance 387Julia van Dessel27 Is network embeddedness really worth it? Migrant networks asstructures of both opportunities and constraints 406Flore GubertIndex
‘This anthology on the institutions of global migration governance is unprecedented in its scope. The editors have created a one-stop resource for scholars, students, and practitioners.’