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دانلود کتاب The Comparative Politics of Immigration: Policy Choices in Germany, Canada, Switzerland, and the United States

دانلود کتاب سیاست مقایسه ای مهاجرت: انتخاب های سیاست در آلمان، کانادا، سوئیس و ایالات متحده

The Comparative Politics of Immigration: Policy Choices in Germany, Canada, Switzerland, and the United States

مشخصات کتاب

The Comparative Politics of Immigration: Policy Choices in Germany, Canada, Switzerland, and the United States

ویرایش:  
نویسندگان:   
سری: Cambridge Studies in Comparative Politics 
ISBN (شابک) : 9781107146648, 2020039503 
ناشر: Cambridge University Press 
سال نشر: 2021 
تعداد صفحات: 462 
زبان: English 
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) 
حجم فایل: 6 مگابایت 

قیمت کتاب (تومان) : 42,000



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فهرست مطالب

Cover
Half-title
Series information
Title page
Copyright information
Dedication
Contents
List of Figures
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
1 Introduction
	The Case for a Comparative Theory of Immigration Policy
		Interests
		Institutions
			Courts
			Political Parties
			Bureaucracies
		Ideas
			National Identity
			Global Norms
		Existing Frameworks of Immigration Politics
	Preview of the Argument
		Theorizing the Direction of Policy Change: The Importance of Insulation
			Three Types of Insulation
			Insulation in the Policy Arenas
		Theorizing the Magnitude of Policy Change: The Importance of Veto Points
	Case Selection and Description
		Historical Legacies
			The Settler Colonial States: Canada and the United States
			The Guest Worker States: Switzerland and Germany
		Political Institutions
			Popular Insulation and Electoral Institutions
			Popular Insulation and Legislative Institutions
			Popular Insulation and Executive Institutions
			Popular Insulation and Judicial Institutions
			Interest Group Insulation and Electoral Institutions
			Interest Group Insulation and Legislative Institutions
			Interest Group Insulation and Executive Institutions
			Interest Group Insulation in the Judicial Arena
	Method of Inquiry
	Book Overview
2 Theorizing Immigration Policy: Veto Points and the Insulation Logics of Policy Arenas
	An Arenas Framework of Immigration Policy Making
	Theorizing the Direction of Policy Change: The Insulation Logic of Policy Arenas
		Immigration Preferences of External Actors
			Public Preferences
			Interest Group Preferences
			Sending-State Preferences
			Receiving-State Preferences
		Popular Insulation in the Policy Arenas
		Interest Group Insulation in the Policy Arenas
		Diplomatic Insulation in the Policy Arenas
	Theorizing the Policy Path
		The Role of Constitutional Rules
			Executive Arena
			Legislative Arena
			Electoral Arena
			Judicial Arena
		The Role of Political Strategy
			Executives as Policy Makers
			Opposition Legislators as Policy Makers
			Pro-immigration Lobbies as External Actors
			Anti-immigration Entrepreneurs as External Actors
			Foreign States
	Theorizing the Magnitude of Policy Change: Policy Arenas as Veto Points
		The Path-Dependent Logic of Immigration Paradigms
		Veto Points and Paradigmatic Policy Change
3 The Making of Swiss Immigration Policy: Explaining Permanent and Temporary Economic Admissions
	The Postwar Guest Worker Rotation System (1948-1961)
		Prewar Legacies: Switzerland's Open Borders Policy (1862-1914)
		Policy Learning in the Executive Arena: The Rotation System of the Late 1940s and 1950s
	The Rotation System under Stress: Recruitment Caps, Treaty Revision, and the Global Ceiling System
		Declining Rotation and the Imposition of Recruitment Caps
		Weakening Diplomatic Insulation and the Renegotiation of the Swiss-Italian Agreement
		The Rise of Populist Politics and the Global Ceiling System of 1970
	Policy Experimentation in the 1990s: The Three Circles Policy
		The Policy Failure of the Global Ceiling
		Policy Making under Diplomatic and Popular Pressure: The Three Circles Policy
	Popular Sovereignty versus Europeanization: From the 1998 Two Circles Policy to the 2014 Referendum on Mass Immigration
		The Two Circles Policy: The Paradigm of the Competition State
		The Agreement on the Free Movement of Persons: Neutralizing the Referendum Threat
		The Immigration Act of 2008: Policy Making in the Legislative Arena
		The 2014 Referendum on Mass Immigration: The People Strike Back
		Implementing the Mass Immigration Initiative: The Primacy of Diplomatic Constraints
		Postscript
	Conclusion
4 The Making of German Immigration Policy: Explaining Permanent and Temporary Economic Admissions
	The Postwar Guest Worker System (1955-1973)
		Prewar Legacies: Forced Rotation in Prussia and Weimar Germany
		The Postwar Recruitment Treaties: Executive Policy Making in the Absence of Diplomatic Insulation and Policy Learning
		The Recession of 1966 and the Failure of Popular Mobilization
		The Recruitment Stop of 1973: The Oil Crisis as a Source of Diplomatic Insulation
	The New Guest Worker Programs of the 1990s
		The Postwar Guest Worker System's Ideational Legacy: The Non-immigration Paradigm
		Policy Learning and the Construction of the Project-Tied System
		Recruitment under Fire: Interest Group Insulation in the Executive Arena
	The Green Card Program of 2000
		Forgoing Popular Insulation: The Executive's Reframing of Immigration
	The Immigration Act of 2004
		Paradigmatic Change in the Executive Arena: The Independent Immigration Commission
		Paradigmatic Contestation in the Legislative and Electoral Arenas
		The Legislative and Judicial Arenas as Veto Points: The Bundesrat and the Federal Constitutional Court
		Postscript
	Conclusion
5 The Making of Canadian Immigration Policy: Explaining Economic and Family Admissions
	From Race-Based to Skills- and Family Tie-Based Immigration: 1962-1976
		The 1962 Immigration Regulations: Policy Liberalization under Diplomatic Pressure
			Policy Making under Low Diplomatic Insulation
			Policy Making under High Popular Insulation
		The 1967 Points System and the Principle of Skills-Based Admission
		The 1976 Immigration Act: Institutionalizing Paradigmatic Reform in the Legislative Arena
	Tilting the Balance from Family to Economic Admissions: The Rise of Human Capital-Based Immigration, 1985-2002
		The Failure of Economic Selectivity under the 1976 Immigration Act
		Shifting the Balance from Family to Economic Admissions in the Executive Arena: The 1980s and 1990s
			The 1980s
			The 1990s
			The Populist Interlude: The Reform Party and the Federal Election of 1993
		Institutionalizing Human Capital-Based Immigration in the Legislative Arena: The Immigration and Refugee Protection Act of 2001 and Its Regulations
			''Not Just Numbers'' and the Human Capital Paradigm of Immigrant Selection
			The Immigration and Refugee Protection Act as Framework Legislation: Preserving Executive-Dominated Policy Making
	The Turn to Market-Driven Immigration: 2006-2015
		The Failure of Human Capital-Based Immigration under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act
		Market Liberalism and the Pursuit of Economic Immigration Reform
			The Rise of Temporary Foreign Worker Recruitment
			The Shift to Employer-Driven Immigrant Selection
		Market Liberalism and the Pursuit of Family Immigration Reform
		Postscript
	Conclusion
6 The Making of US Immigration Policy: Explaining Economic and Family Admissions
	From Race-Based to Family-Based Immigration: 1952-1965
		The 1952 McCarran-Walter Act: The Hegemony of the Race-Based Immigration Paradigm
			Executive Policy Making under Decreasing Diplomatic Insulation
			Legislative Policy Making under the Race-Based Immigration Paradigm
			The Policy Failure of the National Origins System: 1953-1960
		The 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act: The Shift from Race-Based to Family-Based Immigration
			Congressional Veto Points and the Defeat of Paradigmatic Reform
			Power Consolidation and the Navigation of Congressional Veto Points: The Passage of Paradigmatic Reform
			Decreasing Diplomatic Insulation in the Legislative Arena
			Safeguarding Popular Insulation
			Navigating Congressional Veto Points
	Tilting the Balance from Family to Economic Admissions: The 1990 Immigration Act and the Failure of Human Capital-Based Reform
		Depoliticizing Immigration: The Agenda-Setting Power of SCIRP
		Interest Group Pressure and the Failure of Immigration Reform in the 1980s
		The Immigration Act of 1990: The Limits of Paradigmatic Reform in the Absence of Interest Group Insulation
			Weakened Interest Group Insulation in the Senate
			Building a Pro-immigration Interest Coalition: Immigration Reform in the House
			Protecting the Spoils in Conference Committee
			The Executive Arena: From Veto Point to Interest Group Access Point
			Getting Away with Immigration Liberalization: Policy Making in the Absence of Popular Mobilization
	The Failure of Comprehensive Immigration Reform under the Bush and Obama Presidencies
		The Failure of Comprehensive Immigration Reform in 2005-2006: Popular Insulation and the Break-up of the Republican Coalition
		The Failure of Comprehensive Immigration Reform in 2007: Policy Making in the Crossfire of Popular and Interest Group Pressure
		The Failure of Comprehensive Immigration Reform in 2013: Latinx Electoral Strength Meets Anti-immigration Populism
		Postscript
	Conclusion
7 Conclusion
	Political Insulation and the Making of Immigration Policy
	Beyond Family and Economic Immigration Policy
		The Politics of Asylum Policy
		The Politics of Refugee Policy
		The Politics of Migration Control
		The Politics of Integration and Citizenship
	Beyond National-Level Policy Making
		Shifting Policy Up: Supranational Policy Making in the European Union
			The Constitutional Evolution of EU Asylum and Immigration Policy Making
			The Politics of EU Migration and Asylum Policy
				The European Commission and the European Court of Justice
				The European Parliament
				The Council of Ministers
		Shifting Policy Down: Subnational Policy Making
			Provincial Nominee Programs in Canada and Subnational Immigration Enforcement in the US
	The Future Politics of Immigration Policy
References
Index




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