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دانلود کتاب Migration Control Logics and Strategies in Europe: A North-South Comparison

دانلود کتاب منطق ها و استراتژی های کنترل مهاجرت در اروپا: مقایسه شمال-جنوب

Migration Control Logics and Strategies in Europe: A North-South Comparison

مشخصات کتاب

Migration Control Logics and Strategies in Europe: A North-South Comparison

ویرایش:  
نویسندگان:   
سری: IMISCOE Research Series 
ISBN (شابک) : 3031260015, 9783031260018 
ناشر: Springer-IMISCOE 
سال نشر: 2023 
تعداد صفحات: 334 
زبان: English 
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) 
حجم فایل: 5 مگابایت 

قیمت کتاب (تومان) : 82,000



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توجه داشته باشید کتاب منطق ها و استراتژی های کنترل مهاجرت در اروپا: مقایسه شمال-جنوب نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.


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فهرست مطالب

Foreword
Acknowledgements
Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction: Understanding Migration Controls in Europe
	1.1 From Models of Migration Control to Migration Control Regimes
	1.2 The North-South Divide as the Undying European Cleavage
	1.3 E Pluribus Unum: Bringing Like-Minded Scholars Together
	References
Part I: Visa Policy and External Controls
Chapter 2: External Controls: Policing Entries, Enforcing Exits
	2.1 Introduction: Do External Control Policies “Converge”?
	2.2 A Critique of the Implicit Conceptual Framing of Debates on Convergence
	2.3 A Tale of Policy Convergence: Short-Term Visas as a Generalised System of Migration Control
		2.3.1 Patterns of Short-Term Visas Issued by European States
	2.4 Return and Removal Policies: Failed Convergence and the Inconsistency of the North-South Divide Argument
		2.4.1 EU Return Policies: A North/South Divide?
	2.5 Conclusions
	Appendix A Note on Data
	References
		Documents Cited
Chapter 3: Practices of External Control: Is There a North-South Divide?
	3.1 The Logics of External Control: From Schengen to Italy
	3.2 The Practices of External Control: A View from EU Texts
	3.3 The Blurring Boundaries of Control Practices
	3.4 A Model of “Europeanization” from Below?
	3.5 Conclusions
	References
Part II: The Externalisation of Control
Chapter 4: A “European” Externalisation Strategy? A Transnational Perspective on Aid, Border Regimes, and the EU Trust Fund for Africa in Morocco
	4.1 Introduction
	4.2 Theory: Transnational Governmentality, the Transnational Social Field, and Governing Through Aid
	4.3 Governing Migration Through Aid in the Western Mediterranean
	4.4 What the Implementation of the EUTF Tells About “Externalisation”
		4.4.1 De-centring and Re-centring Morocco in the European Border Control Strategy
		4.4.2 Heterogeneous Strategies and the NGO-Isation of EU Member States
		4.4.3 The EUTF and Morocco’s Migration Diplomacy
	4.5 Conclusion
	References
Chapter 5: The Genealogy of the External Dimension of the Spanish Immigration Regime: When a Bricolage National Policy Becomes a Driver of Europeanisation
	5.1 Introduction
	5.2 Top-Down Europeanisation: Spain’s European Obligations and National Apathy
	5.3 The Transition: Spain’s Ascent to an Active Role in the Development of the External Dimension of the European Immigration Regime
	5.4 Bottom-Up Europeanisation: Spain’s Key Role in the Construction of the External Dimension of Immigration Policy
	5.5 Spain: A Model for the External Dimension of Immigration Policies in Europe?
	5.6 Conclusions: Reaping the Benefits?
	References
Part III: Internal Controls
Chapter 6: Challenges and Ambiguities of the Policies for Immigrants’ Regularisation: The Portuguese Case in Context
	6.1 Introduction
	6.2 Regularisations in Portugal: In Search of a Policy
		6.2.1 A Series of Policy Measures
		6.2.2 The Changing Alignment of Interests: The Erosion of the Political Consensus Around Immigration?
	6.3 The Portuguese Case in Perspective
	6.4 Final Remarks
	References
Chapter 7: Knowledge Production Through Regularisation and Ex-Post Regulation Strategies: Italy and Germany Compared
	7.1 Introduction
	7.2 When the Exception Becomes the Rule: The Role of Regularisations in the Italian Migration Regime
	7.3 The Path to “Real” Residence: Forms of Regularisation in the German Migration Regime
		7.3.1 From the Suspension of Deportation to Residence Regularisation
		7.3.2 Lights and Shadows of Ex-Post Regulation Tools in Germany
	7.4 Conclusion: The Significance of Regularisations and Ex-Post Regulations Across Regimes
	References
Chapter 8: Differently Similar: The Quest for Migration Control in the Netherlands and Spain
	8.1 Introduction
	8.2 The Quest for Migration Control: Policies and Implementation
	8.3 Internal Controls in Amsterdam and Madrid: A Case Study
		8.3.1 Work Controls
		8.3.2 Ad-hoc Identity and Documentation Controls
		8.3.3 Housing and Healthcare Controls
	8.4 Internal Migration Controls in the Netherlands and Spain: Differently Similar?
	References
Part IV: Labour Migration Policy
Chapter 9: “Selecting by Origin” Revisited: On the Particularistic Turn of German Labour Migration Policy
	9.1 Introduction
	9.2 Source-Country Particularism: Germany’s Labour Migration Regime Before 2000
		9.2.1 The Pioneer of Labour Migration Policy in Post War-Germany: Guest Worker Recruitment 1955–1973
		9.2.2 Exceptions from the Ban After 1973: Migration by Ordinance and Bilateral Agreements in the 1990s
	9.3 Triumph of Meritocracy: A Universalized Regime for the Twenty-First Century
		9.3.1 First Steps of Farewell to a Labour Migration Policy Based on Countries of Origin: The German Green Card
		9.3.2 Qualifications in the Centre: The Immigration Act of 2005 as Paradigm Shift
		9.3.3 Implementing the Blue Card – And Much More Than That
		9.3.4 The Culmination of Selecting by Qualifications: The Skilled Immigration Act
	9.4 Back to the Sixties: The Return of a Policy of “Selecting by Country of Origin”?
		9.4.1 Selecting by Origin in the Legal Framework: The Western Balkans Regulation
		9.4.2 The Institutional Framework: Labour Demand, Migration Control and Development Cooperation as Drivers of Particularism
			9.4.2.1 Triple-Win Programmes, Bilateral Agreements and Skilled Labour Bridges
			9.4.2.2 Migration Advisory Centres
			9.4.2.3 Recruiting Seasonal Workers
	9.5 Discussion and Conclusion: Blurring Boundaries and Unexpected Similarities Between Germany and Southern Europe
	References
Chapter 10: The Admission of Foreign Workers to Italy: Closing the “Gap” with Northern Europe
	10.1 Introduction
	10.2 Northern European Labour Immigration Regimes
	10.3 The Italian Labour Immigration Regime
		10.3.1 Italian Labour Immigration Regime Mid 1990s – 2008
			10.3.1.1 Entry Mechanisms: Annual Quotas and Recruitment from Abroad
			10.3.1.2 Regularisations
			10.3.1.3 Mobile EU Citizens: Functional Equivalents of Non-EU Labour Immigrants
		10.3.2 Italian Labour Immigration Regime 2008–2020
			10.3.2.1 Drivers of Policy Change: Economic and Humanitarian Crises and Alternative Sources of Labour
			10.3.2.2 Quantitative and Qualitative Changes in Annual Quotas
			10.3.2.3 Regularisations
			10.3.2.4 The Facilitation of Highly Skilled Non-EU Labour Immigrants
	10.4 Differences and Similarities Between the Italian and Northern European Regimes
		10.4.1 Differences
			10.4.1.1 Admission of Low and Medium Skilled Non-EU Migrant Workers
			10.4.1.2 Inflexibility
			10.4.1.3 Implementation Gaps
		10.4.2 Similarities
			10.4.2.1 Entry Mechanisms and Skills
			10.4.2.2 Inflexibility and Implementation Gaps
			10.4.2.3 Free Movement and Functional Equivalents to Non-EU Labour Migrants
	10.5 Conclusion
	References
Chapter 11: Seasonal Workers in Agriculture: The Cases of Spain and The Netherlands in Times of Covid-19
	11.1 Introduction
	11.2 Migration Regimes in the Light of the Governance of MLS
	11.3 Spain
		11.3.1 Becoming an Immigration Country
		11.3.2 Labour Migration Policies
		11.3.3 Agricultural Seasonal Work: Past and Present
		11.3.4 Working in Times of Covid-19
	11.4 The Netherlands
		11.4.1 Three Origins of Immigration
		11.4.2 Labour Immigration Policies
		11.4.3 Seasonal Work: Past and Present
		11.4.4 Working in Times of Covid-19
	11.5 Conclusion
	References
Part V: Intra-EU Mobility
Chapter 12: Migration Policy and Welfare Chauvinism in the United Kingdom: European Divergence or Trend-Setting?
	12.1 Introduction: The European Way to Brexit
	12.2 Post-war Britain: Between Welfare Chauvinism and European Marketisation
	12.3 Global Britain at the Heart of the European Regime
	12.4 Austerity and the “Hostile Environment”
	12.5 Brexit: Reconfiguring the Migration-Welfare Nexus
	12.6 Conclusions: A Very British European Regime?
	References
Chapter 13: Turning the Welfare-Migration Nexus Upside-Down: The Case of European Retirees in Spain
	13.1 Introduction
	13.2 Intra-EU Retirement Migration in Europe and in Spain: An Overview
		13.2.1 The Healthcare “Scrounger” Stereotype
	13.3 Cross-Border Healthcare Provision for EU Citizens
		13.3.1 The European Framework
		13.3.2 The Provision of Cross-Border Healthcare in Spain
	13.4 Intra-EU Mobility: Between Welfare Restrictions and New Market Opportunities
	13.5 Conclusion
	References
Part VI: Asylum Policy
Chapter 14: Welcome Culture and Bureaucratic Ambiguity: Germany’s Complex Asylum Regime
	14.1 Welcome Culture in the Crisis of 2015 and Afterwards
	14.2 Quality Problems in the German Asylum Decision System
	14.3 British and Italian Parallels and the Common Tension Between Asylum Principles and the Political Will to Reject Asylum Claims
	14.4 The Policies of Backlog and Encampment
	14.5 Best Practices in Europe and the Reluctance to Optimise
	14.6 Conclusion: Administrative Ambiguity in an Integrative Asylum Regime
	14.7 Postscript: The New Regime for Displaced Ukrainians – A Blueprint?
	References
Chapter 15: Looking Into Policy Change: How the Italian Asylum Regime Came of Age
	15.1 Introduction
	15.2 From Infancy to Puberty: The Emergence of the Italian Asylum Regime
		15.2.1 Infancy, When You Think That Problems Will Fade Away: The 1990s Emergency Approach
		15.2.2 Puberty, When the Adults Ask You to Be Responsible: Towards the Setting Up of Ordinary Measures
	15.3 Adolescence, When You Protest Against the Adults: The Management of the Arab Spring’s Refugees
	15.4 Coming of Age, When You Cannot Step Back Anymore: The European Refugee Crisis
	15.5 Weak Political-Institutional Capacity: The Italian Asylum Regime’s Main Hurdle
	15.6 Concluding Remarks
	References
Chapter 16: The Greek Asylum Regime: From Latecomer on Reception to Inspirational Model on Asylum Procedures
	16.1 Introduction
	16.2 Greece’s Asylum Prior to 2015
	16.3 The EU-Turkey Statement 2016 and Its Impact on the Greek Reception System
		16.3.1 Non-state Actors in Reception
		16.3.2 The Local Actors
	16.4 Beyond Reception: The Greek Asylum System After the Statement
		16.4.1 Reforming Asylum to Fast-Track Returns
		16.4.2 The International Protection Act
	16.5 The New Pact on Migration and Asylum: Greece an Inspirational Model for Europe?
		16.5.1 Screening
		16.5.2 Border Procedure
		16.5.3 Force Majeure
	16.6 Conclusion
	References
Chapter 17: Concluding Remarks: Towards a New Conceptualisation of Similarities and Differences in European Migration Controls
	17.1 From the North-South Divide to Blurring Boundaries
	17.2 The Converging Composition of Migration Inflows
	17.3 Europeanisation as Hybridisation
	17.4 Framing Difference: Competing Interests and Internal Constraints
		17.4.1 The Role of Competing State Interests
		17.4.2 Different Types of Internal Constraints
	17.5 Conclusion and Outlook
	References




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