Borders and Migration

The Canadian Experience in Comparative Perspective

Contributions by Asad G. Kiyani, Birte Wassenberg, Can E. Mutlu, Claude Beaupré, Donald Galloway, Edward Boyle, Franziska Fischer, Naomi Chi, Sabine Lehr, Scott D. Watson, Solomon Wong, Victoria Simmons, Emmanuel Brunet-Jailly
Series edited by Geneviève Tellier
Edited by Michael J. Carpenter, Melissa Kelly, and Oliver Schmidtke
Categories: Political Science, Public & Social Policy, Social Sciences, Immigration, Emigration & Transnationalism
Series: Politics and Public Policy
Publisher: Les Presses de l'Université d'Ottawa/University of Ottawa Press
Paperback : 9780776638058, 372 pages, January 2023
Hardcover : 9780776638065, 372 pages, January 2023
Ebook (PDF) : 9780776638072, 372 pages, January 2023
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780776638089, 372 pages, January 2023

Table of contents

Introduction – Integrating Conceptual and Comparative Perspectives on Borders and Migration
By Michael J. Carpenter, Melissa Kelly, Oliver Schmidtke
Part 1 – Canada in Context
Chapter 1 – ​​Commodifying Migrants: Borders and Canada’s Temporary Foreign Workers
By Oliver Schmidtke
Chapter 2 – The ‘Benevolent’ Status Quo State: Understanding Canada’s Participation in Global Migration Governance
By Scott D. Watson
Chapter 3 – European Union and the Governance of its External Borders: The EU-Turkey Migration Agreement
By Can E. Mutlu
Part 2 – Borders Above the Law: Legal Limits and Loopholes
Chapter 4 – De-bordering and (Re-)bordering in the EU during the 2015 Migration Crisis: The End of “Europe without Borders”?
By Birte Wassenberg
Chapter 5 – Criminalization, Safety, and the Safe Third Country Agreement
By Asad G. Kiyani
Chapter 6 – Border Control and Xenophobia: Joining the Dots
By Donald Galloway
Part 3 – New Perspectives, Challenging Old Thinking
Chapter 7 – Refugee Sponsorship: Navigating the Borders of Expansion and Restriction of the Protection Regime
By Sabine Lehr
Chapter 8 – Beyond Preclearance, Future Borders, Digital IDs and Privacy Management: A Technology and Policy Roadmap for Border Processing
By Solomon Wong
Chapter 9 – On Bulking Up: Humanitarian Borders and State-making in Mexico
By Victoria Simmons
Part 4 – Denaturalizing and Deconstructing National Interest and Border Policy
Chapter 10 – Border Control and the Migration Policy Puzzle in Japan
By Edward Boyle and Naomi Chi
Chapter 11 – The Failure of the European Union’s Promise for Transnational Solidarity: The Challenge of the Refugee Crisis
By Franziska Fischer
Chapter 12 – Canadian News Media Coverage and Discourse of the Refugee and Migrant Crisis in Europe, 2015-2016
By Claude Beaupre
Conclusion – Mobility, Borders and Comparative Research
By Emmanuel Brunet-Jailly

Description

Since 2015, the cross-border movement of migrants and refugees has reached unprecedented levels. War, persecution, destitution, and desertification impelled millions to flee their homes in central Asia, the Levant, and North Africa. The responses in the Global North varied country by country, with some opening their borders to historically large numbers of refugees and asylum seekers, while others adopted increasingly strict border policies.
The dramatic increase in global migration has triggered controversial political and scholarly debates. The governance of cross-border mobility constitutes one of the key policy conundrums of the 21st century, raising fundamental questions about human rights, state responsibility, and security. The research literatures on borders and migration have rapidly expanded to meet the increased urgency of record numbers of displaced people. Yet, border studies have conventionally paid little attention to flows of people, and migration studies have simultaneously underappreciated the changing nature of borders.
Borders and Migration: The Canadian Experience in Comparative Perspective provides new insights into how migration is affected by border governance and vice versa. Starting from the Canadian experience, and with an emphasis on refugees and irregular migrants, this multidisciplinary book explores how various levels of governance have facilitated and restricted flows of people across international borders. The book sheds light on the changing governance of migration and borders. Comparisons between Canada and other parts of the world bring into relief contemporary trends and challenges.
Available formats: hardcover, trade paperback, accessible PDF, and accessible ePub