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Immigration, Security, and the Liberal State: The Politics of Migration Regulation in Europe and the United States

  • Trinity College Hartford

Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Contextualizing the regulation of human mobility in a new security framework, this book offers an original perspective on the dominant mode of politics and evolving norms shaping the immigration policies of contemporary liberal states. In doing so, the authors challenge existing paradigms that privilege economic and cultural factors over new security ones in explaining the critical institutional and normative changes in migration management, from the early post-WWII through the post-Cold War era. Drawing on evidence from multiple sources, including media and elite discourse, policy tracking, party manifesto data and public opinion across Europe and the US, the book exposes the restrictive nature of immigration politics and policies when immigration is framed as a security threat, and considers its implications for civil liberties. Informed by a rich breadth of scholarly sub-disciplines, the findings contribute both empirically and theoretically to the literatures on international migration, security and public opinion.

Original languageEnglish
PublisherCambridge University Press
Number of pages492
ISBN (Electronic)9781009298001
ISBN (Print)9781009298018
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2024

Keywords

  • attitudes
  • civil liberties
  • democracy
  • human mobility
  • immigration
  • liberal states
  • markets
  • non-state actors
  • politics
  • public opinion
  • rights
  • security
  • threat

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