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Transnational Migration and Human Security

by Truong, Thanh-Dam.
Authors: Gasper, Des.%editor. | SpringerLink (Online service) Series: Hexagon Series on Human and Environmental Security and Peace, 1865-5793 ; . 6 Physical details: X, 370 p. online resource. ISBN: 3642127576 Subject(s): Environmental sciences. | Environmental law. | Environmental economics. | Political science. | Environment. | Environmental Law/Policy/Ecojustice. | Political Science. | Environmental Economics.
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E-Book E-Book AUM Main Library 344.046 (Browse Shelf) Not for loan

Preface -- Acknowledgement -- Part I Introduction -- Part II Neoliberal Governmentality and Transnational Migration: the Interplay of Security Fears and Business Forces -- Part III Migrant Experiences: Agency in the Grey Zone -- Part IV Transnational Identities and Issues of Citizenship -- Part V Ethics of Modern Day Transnational Migration: A Human Security Perspective -- Abbreviations -- Bibliography -- Biographies of Contributors -- Index.

This volume addresses key aspects of human security in transnational migration. The 22 essays cover all levels of migration systems, from families, farms and firms through to global organizations and negotiating forums. They show how institutional frameworks for cross-border movements of people, finance, and goods have co-evolved with changes in the workings of nation-states. They thereby reveal aspects of power and privilege within ‘international migration’ as a discursive area and at its intersections with the fields of ‘development’, governance and ‘security’. Revisiting presuppositions that have been taken as givens, and exploring their role in shaping rules and institutions that control the movements of people across and within borders, the essays reveal also the mentalities and rationalities that have made up and continue to make up the reality of transnational migration today. A human security perspective can encourage exploratory thinking and provide conceptual space for deeper understandings of ‘human’, ‘movement’ and ‘borders’, to help overcome the limits of conventional analytical and policy dualisms and dichotomies.

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