The Invisibility Bargain: Governance Networks and Migrant Human Security
Autor Jeffrey D. Pughen Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 mar 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197553916
ISBN-10: 0197553915
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 231 x 155 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197553915
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 231 x 155 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
The book is important reading for scholars and graduate students interested in migration studies and is accessible to advanced undergraduates.
Readers will find many noteworthy ideas in this book. Regarding its theoretical framework, the "refocusing" of human security on South-South migration, as well as the book's attention to the subtle point that greater interaction among migrants and receiving communities paradoxically leads to migrants' self-censorship (e.g., avoiding speaking up), are pivotal.
Understanding what factors ensure that immigrant-receiving nations will be havens for people who flee their homelands is the question for 21st century migration researchers. Jeffrey Pugh's exhaustively researched study of Colombian immigrants living in Ecuador gives us fresh answers. The Invisibility Bargain shatters important assumptions about how countries can offer peace and security to their foreign-born populations and offers rich evidence for the pivotal role played by perceptions of immigrants as bringing value and non-state actor allies who convey and advocate for the interests of those immigrants. Pugh's book is absolutely critical research for anyone working in contemporary migration studies.
This book offers the most comprehensive analysis of Colombian forced migration in Ecuador to date, showing how particular assemblages of non-state actors, migrant organizations, and local state actors may be the most appropriate response to human security and peace building. In doing so, it offers important clues to understand how forced migrants negotiate their access to rights and protection in states with strong gaps between formal and effective rights.
In rescaling the politics of reception, Pugh incorporates actors and processes into the making of politics that others all too often overlook. By providing the framework and theoretical orientation needed to foster global and comparative work, he reinserts questions of migration, conflict, and human security into the centre of contemporary scholarly debate. While his analysis and findings are from Latin America, scholars from elsewhere in the world will find deep resonance with their own work. Indeed, this text is destined to become a reference for discussions of governance and mobility for years to come.
Jeffrey Pugh's compact, seminal work is the product of 8 years of fieldwork in the area and living with the people. It shows how numbers of illegal migrants made their way above, below, and around the state through an invisibility bargain, but also alternative strategies or negotiation with civil society on the other side. A thorough, detailed, insightful study of a subject that has so far fallen between the cracks of comparative politics and interstate relations and faces the challenges of researching and analyzing human security with enormous implications for understanding the growing topic of immigration.
Readers will find many noteworthy ideas in this book. Regarding its theoretical framework, the "refocusing" of human security on South-South migration, as well as the book's attention to the subtle point that greater interaction among migrants and receiving communities paradoxically leads to migrants' self-censorship (e.g., avoiding speaking up), are pivotal.
Understanding what factors ensure that immigrant-receiving nations will be havens for people who flee their homelands is the question for 21st century migration researchers. Jeffrey Pugh's exhaustively researched study of Colombian immigrants living in Ecuador gives us fresh answers. The Invisibility Bargain shatters important assumptions about how countries can offer peace and security to their foreign-born populations and offers rich evidence for the pivotal role played by perceptions of immigrants as bringing value and non-state actor allies who convey and advocate for the interests of those immigrants. Pugh's book is absolutely critical research for anyone working in contemporary migration studies.
This book offers the most comprehensive analysis of Colombian forced migration in Ecuador to date, showing how particular assemblages of non-state actors, migrant organizations, and local state actors may be the most appropriate response to human security and peace building. In doing so, it offers important clues to understand how forced migrants negotiate their access to rights and protection in states with strong gaps between formal and effective rights.
In rescaling the politics of reception, Pugh incorporates actors and processes into the making of politics that others all too often overlook. By providing the framework and theoretical orientation needed to foster global and comparative work, he reinserts questions of migration, conflict, and human security into the centre of contemporary scholarly debate. While his analysis and findings are from Latin America, scholars from elsewhere in the world will find deep resonance with their own work. Indeed, this text is destined to become a reference for discussions of governance and mobility for years to come.
Jeffrey Pugh's compact, seminal work is the product of 8 years of fieldwork in the area and living with the people. It shows how numbers of illegal migrants made their way above, below, and around the state through an invisibility bargain, but also alternative strategies or negotiation with civil society on the other side. A thorough, detailed, insightful study of a subject that has so far fallen between the cracks of comparative politics and interstate relations and faces the challenges of researching and analyzing human security with enormous implications for understanding the growing topic of immigration.
Notă biografică
Jeffrey D. Pugh is Assistant Professor in the McCormack Graduate School of Policy and Global Studies at the University of Massachusetts Boston, and the founding executive director of the Center for Mediation, Peace, and Resolution of Conflict (CEMPROC) in Quito, Ecuador. Pugh's research focuses on peacebuilding and non-state actors in the Global South, and he is a past president of the Middle Atlantic Council on Latin American Studies (MACLAS).