The Governance of International Migration : Irregular Migrants' Access to Right to Stay in Turkey and Morocco /
As concern about immigration has grown within Europe in recent years, the European Union has brought pressure to bear on countries that are allegedly not sufficiently governing irregular migration with and within their borders. This book looks at that issue in Turkey and Morocco, showing how it affe...
Saved in:
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Amsterdam :
Amsterdam University Press,
[2018]
|
Series: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Full text available: |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Table of Contents:
- Cover; Table of contents; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; 1 Introduction; 1.1 Researching irregular migration as 'migrant illegality'; How migrant illegality as juridical status is produced; Irregular migrants and subordinate incorporation; Migrants as political actors?; Individual tactics; 1.2 Researching migrant illegality in new immigration countries; 1.3 Comparative research design and case selection; 1.4 Data collection; Legal documents; Expert interviews with state officials and civil society actors; Migrant interviews; Ethical issues and negotiating resources; 1.5 Mapping the book.
- 2 The production of migrant illegalityInternational and domestic dynamics in a comparison; 2.1 Becoming lands of destination; 2.2 The international context in the production of illegality; Morocco's migration diplomacy; Irregular migration in Turkey's long-standing EU accession; From international production of illegality to public policy; 2.3 Moroccan immigration politics from criminalization to integration; Emergence of immigration policy and criminalization/; Towards integration?; 2.4 Migrant illegality as Europeanization in Turkey; Emerged as refugee, developed as an EU issue.
- New legislation and the institutionalization of migrant illegality3 Morocco as a case of political incorporation; Introduction; 3.1 Deportability as part of daily experience; Deportability at the borderlands; Deportability in urban life; After the King's Speech; 3.2 Illegality in (semi- )settlement; Settling into violent neighbourhoods; 'The problem is work'; 3.3 Access to public healthcare and education; Healthcare between formal recognition and bureaucratic incorporation; Public education: Bureaucratic sabotage and self-exclusion; 3.4 Reversing illegality through mobilization.
- Emergence of civil society networksMigrants' self-organizations; Brothers in arms: What makes alliances possible?; Mobilization for individual mobility; 4 Turkey; De-politicized illegality and a quest for legitimacy; 4.1 Migrant deportability beyond the EU borders; Experiences of deportability: Between tolerance and arbitrariness; 4.2 Illegality in (semi- )settlement: Incorporation into informality; Settling into informality; 'We arrived, slept, and the next day we started working'; Limits of labour market participation; Opening access to healthcare?; Education.
- 4.4 Reversing illegality: Mobilization or moving sideways?Civil society working on immigration issues; Legal sidesteps in the absence of mobilization; 5 Migrant illegality beyond EU borders; Turkey and Morocco in a comparative perspective; 5.1 Deportations and perceptions of deportability; 5.2 Socio-economic participation and daily legitimacy; 5.3 Access to rights through institutions and the role of 'street-level advocacy'; 5.4 Reversing illegality; Mobilization for the rights of irregular migrants; Migrant mobilization for legal status; Conclusion; 6 Conclusions.