ABSTRACT

Multilayered Migration Governance explores the emerging concept of ‘migration partnerships’ in political management and governance of international migration flows. The partnership approach to migration seeks to balance responsibility and benefits of migration more evenly between source, transit and destination countries.

Case studies from the US, Europe and Africa analyse the various initiatives and programmes applied in national, regional and transcontinental migration policy today. It shows that a multilayered system of migration governance has emerged which embeds primarily bilateral and mainly control-focused migration partnerships in a broader framework of (trans-)regional and international cooperation providing key links to policy areas in development, trade, finance and security.

Utilising a comparative approach to assess the impact of partnerships on global migration policies, the book will be of interests to scholars and students in migration and development studies and international relations more broadly.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

Governance through partnerships in international migration

part I|73 pages

Global perspectives

part II|109 pages

EU partnerships

chapter 4|19 pages

Mobility Partnerships

‘Insecurity partnerships' for policy coherence and migrant workers’ human rights in the EU

chapter 6|40 pages

Facilitating the temporary movement of natural persons

Economic partnership agreements versus bilateral migration agreements and Mobility Partnerships 1

part III|105 pages

Bilateral partnerships

chapter 8|42 pages

Franco-African pacts on migration

Bilateralism revisited in multilayered migration governance

chapter 10|18 pages

New trends in managing migration in Canada

Towards a mobility paradigm?

chapter 11|28 pages

Depoliticization through partnership in the field of migration

The Mexico–US case 1