Fences and neighbors : the political geography of immigration control

Bibliographic Information

Fences and neighbors : the political geography of immigration control

Jeannette Money

Cornell University Press, c1999

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Note

Bibliography: p. 223-239

Includes index

"A project of the University of California Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation"

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Why do some countries welcome new arrivals from abroad while other nations are less hospitable? Why do immigration policies change over time? This text considers several of the world's wealthiest democracies, nations that remain magnets for economic migrants as well as for refugees. Focusing on the tendency of immigrants to concentrate in specific locations in their new homelands, this book analyzes the implications of this political geography for democracies. Politics of immigration control starts at the local level, Jeannette Money asserts. Drawing on detailed evidence from Britain, France, Australia and, more briefly, the USA, she demonstrates that local support for and opposition to immigration is contingent upon economic conditions, as well the numbers of foreigners entering the country and their access to the resources of the welfare state. Whether these local pressures are translated into policies of openness or closure at the national level depends on whether the local constituencies are critical to maintaining or gaining a national electoral majority.

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