Международные миграции: политико-правовое измерение (International Migration: The Political and Legal Dimension)

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vladimir Malakhov ◽  
Mark Simon ◽  
Alexander Motin ◽  
Denis Letnyakov ◽  
Kiryl Kascian ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 730-741
Author(s):  
Maram Homsi

The article examines the modern forms and directions of migration from the countries of the Middle East in the period from 1990 to 2017. It is shown that the high emigration potential of the countries of the Middle East is formed not only by socio-economic and political factors, but also by demographic development trends. Based on a detailed study of official statistics, special attention is paid to the study of the dynamics and geography of international migration in the region. Detailed donor countries and recipient countries of migrants from the Middle East. The political and ethnocultural consequences of large-scale migration from this region to European countries are considered.


2020 ◽  
Vol 75 (4) ◽  
pp. 662-672
Author(s):  
Tim Höflinger

One of the most debated and criticized characteristics of the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (GCM) is its legally non-binding form. This article analyzes the GCM’s legal form, mechanisms of effectiveness, and legitimacy and finds that while the legal form of the GCM is important, the available mechanisms of effectiveness and legitimacy are equally or, perhaps, more important factors to determine the compact’s relevance and future impact. Although non-binding, the GCM does possess the relevance, capacities, and legitimacy to become a normative force in the field of international migration governance. Compliance with its outlined commitments will, however, be strongly dependent on the political will of the participating states. Perhaps its key function will be to fill the existing gaps in hard law in global migration governance by fostering cooperation and consolidating international obligations, standards, and stakeholders of a crosscutting topic into one instrument.


2004 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 331-366 ◽  
Author(s):  
THOMAS FAIST

The transnational turn in international migration research since the early 1990s has sparked vigorous debates among migration scholars. Yet the political aspects of transnational migration have been under-studied when compared to social, cultural and economic processes. This is particularly astonishing because the very term transnational suggests the importance of national borders and nationally-bound polities as opportunities and restrictions of exchange, reciprocity, solidarity and hierarchical control for processes involving non-state actors to varying degrees. The goal of this analysis is to take stock of some developments in the general study of transnationalization and treat the aspects of politics, policy and polity as a specific case of this broader conceptual and empirical effort. This effort also identifies questions for further research and offers methodological venues for the study of transnationalism arising out of international migration.


2014 ◽  
Vol 66 (3) ◽  
pp. 406-445 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Fitzgerald ◽  
David Leblang ◽  
Jessica C. Teets

Bilateral flows of international migrants exhibit tremendous variance both across destination countries and over time. To explain this variance, studies of international migration tend to focus on economic determinants such as income differentials or on social conditions such as the presence of coethnics in certain destination countries. The authors argue that migration is driven not solely by economic or social determinants; rather, the political environment across destinations plays a substantively large role in influencing bilateral migration flows. They test the importance of the political environment—citizenship rights and the prominence of right-wing parties—using data on migration flows from 178 origin countries into 18 destination countries over the period 1980–2006. They find, even after controlling for a variety of economic, social, policy, and international variables, that variation in political environments across time and destination plays a key role in observed patterns of international migration.


2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 177
Author(s):  
Eduardo Matos Oliveira ◽  
Marcelo De Almeida Medeiros ◽  
Leonardo Gill Santos ◽  
Mariana Cockles Teixeira

O objetivo deste trabalho é fazer uma extensão do estudo apresentado por J. Fitzgerald, D. Leblang e J. Teets no artigo “Defying the Law of Gravity: The Political Economy of International Migration” na revista World Politics em 2014. Os autores analisam a relação entre o fluxo migratório internacional e as condições políticas internas nos países de destino. Para isso, eles elaboraram um índice que avalia o rigor no procedimento de concessão de cidadania em centros receptores e utilizaram esta medida como referência para a abertura política do país em relação aos imigrantes. Entretanto, o Brasil não foi acrescentado na lista de países que foram codificados no índice como ponto de destino. Iremos, portanto, suprir esta lacuna, a fim de comparar a política brasileira de concessão de nacionalidade para estrangeiros com outros países que também recebem um grande fluxo de pessoas. A partir dos resultados foi possível questionar a validade da medida, visto que o Brasil apresenta um perfil de abertura política de acordo com os critérios elencados pelo índice, apesar da legislação brasileira ter um caráter autoritário e conter sérias restrições à liberdade dos imigrantes.


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