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As the law and politics of migration become increasingly intertwined, this thought-provoking Research Handbook addresses the challenge of analysing their relationship. Discussing the evolving theoretical approaches to migration, it explores the growing attention given to the legal frameworks for migration and the expansion of regulation, as migration moves to the centre of the global political agenda.The Research Handbook demonstrates that the overlap between law and politics puts the rule of law at risk in matters of migration as advocates around the globe increasingly turn to law to address the challenges of new migration politics. Presenting a fresh mapping of current issues in the field, it focusses on institutions of migration and analyses the securitization of migration management and the strengths and weaknesses of the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration.Written by leading scholars specialising in a range of disciplines, the Research Handbook on the Law and Politics of Migration will be an illuminating read for academics and students of migration studies with backgrounds in law, politics, criminology, sociology, history, geography and beyond.
Edited by Catherine Dauvergne, Professor, Allard School of LawThe University of British Columbia, Canada
Contents:1 Introduction to the Research Handbook on the Law and Politics ofMigration : law, politics, and the spaces between 1Catherine DauvergnePART I FRAMING THE LAW AND POLITICS OF MIGRATION2 The politics of migration law: interests, ideas, and institutions 8Irene Bloemraad3 Unsettling migration studies: indigeneity and immigration in settlercolonial states 21Antje Ellermann and Ben O’Heran4 Migration politics at the meso-level 35Erin Aeran Chung5 The problem of boundaries: the constitution and the meaning of citizenship 47Asha Kaushal6 The trilemma of Canadian migrant worker policy: facilitating employeraccess while protecting the Canadian labour market and addressingmigrant worker exploitation 63Sarah Marsden, Eric Tucker, and Leah F. VoskoPART II INSTITUTIONS AND THEIR EVOLUTION7 Immigration enforcement: why does it matter who is in charge? 83Karine Côté-Boucher and Mireille Paquet8 On public sanctuary: exploring the nature of refuge in precarious times 96Laura Madokoro9 The shift towards increased citizen-driven migration in Canada 110Shauna Labman and Sarah Zell10 Closing the gap: official statistics on the migration on unaccompaniedmigrant children across the Mediterranean 125Luna Vives and Kira Williams11 Big tech and migration management 141Rebecca Hamlin12 The power of politics: exploring the true potential of communitysponsorship programmes 155Jennifer BondPART III THE POLITICS OF COURTS13 The geopolitics of knowledge production in international migration law 172Thomas Spijkerboer14 The West and the Muslim refugee: legitimacy, legality and loss 188Satvinder S. Juss15 Populism and the failure to acknowledge the human rights of migrants 202Donald Galloway16 Manufacturing foreigners: the law and politics of transforming citizensinto migrants 217Michelle Foster and Jade RobertsPART IV EXAMINING THE SHARP END OF STATE POWER17 Immigration detention and the production of race in the UK 235Mary Bosworth18 Fast-track, accelerated, and expedited asylum procedures as a tool of exclusion 246Daniel Ghezelbash19 Immigration detention in the age of COVID-19 260Efrat Arbel and Molly Joeck20 Protection, crime, and punishment: regulation at the nexus ofcrimmigration and refugee law 277Anthea Vogl21 Privacy rights at the Canadian border: judicial assumptions and thelimits of the Charter 291Benjamin GooldPART V THE CHALLENGE OF INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE22 Re-defining the international refugee regime: UNHCR, UNRWA, andthe challenge of multigenerational protracted refugee situations 308Yasmeen Abu-Laban23 Knowledge controversies of global migration governance:understanding the controversy surrounding the Global Compact 321Scott D. Watson and Corey Robinson24 The Global Compact for Migration as social theodicy 338Colin Grey25 Why the Sustainable Development Goals? Examining internationalcooperation on migration 353Elspeth Guild26 Global migration governance and migrant rights advocacy: theflexibilization of multi-stakeholder negotiations 367Jenna Hennebry and Nicola PiperIndex
'This Research Handbook is both timely and timeless - offering penetrating insight into contemporary developments in subjects as diverse as technology and migration, or the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, while also offering fresh insights into persistent normative and conceptual debates in the field. It is bound to become a field-defining collection.'