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Author Gamlen, Alan John, 1976- author.

Title Human geopolitics : states, emigrants, and the rise of diaspora institutions / Alan Gamlen
Published Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2019

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Description 1 online resource
Summary Migration has become a top priority for politicians and policy makers around the world, but most writing on the topic covers only half the issue, wrongly assuming that migration policy equals immigration policy where, in reality, the majority of states care more deeply about emigration and the transnational involvements of emigrants and their descendants in the diaspora. Liberal democratic states have long considered emigration controls off-limits, for fear that they violate individual freedom of exit at the same time as interfering in the domestic affairs of other states. But these norms are changing fast: in the past 25 years, more than half of all United Nations member states have established some form of government department devoted to their people living0in other countries. What explains the rise of these 'diaspora institutions', and how does it relate to the political geographies of decolonisation, regional integration, and global governance since World War II? 0This book addresses these questions, based on quantitative data covering all UN members from 1936-2015, and fieldwork with high-level policy makers across 60 states. The book shows how, in many world regions, the unregulated spread of diaspora institutions is unleashing a wave of 'human geopolitics': a kind of geopolitics involving claims over people rather than territory. It argues for the development of principles to guide the future development of state-diaspora relations in an era of unprecedented global interdependence
Notes Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed May 6, 2019)
Subject Human geography -- Political aspects
Geopolitics.
Emigration and immigration.
Emigration and Immigration
geopolitics.
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Geopolitics.
Emigration and immigration
Geopolitics
Migration.
Diaspora.
Geopolitics.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780192569981
0192569988