The Integration Nation. Adrian Favell
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Название: The Integration Nation

Автор: Adrian Favell

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Социология

Серия:

isbn: 9781509549412

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ political economy – international relations, the balance of states and markets, national and international institutions of governance, and so on (see Bashford 2014). In a globalizing world, the normative possibility of sovereign nation-state-societies as more or less stable, bounded ‘population containers’ – the Westphalian system defined by essentially immobile ‘native’ citizenries, which may absorb limited numbers of ‘newcomer’ immigrants – needs to be settled first.

      In the geographical literature – where there is a strong influence of political ecology – mobilities are defined in a much broader way to include all kinds of non-human mobile objects, goods, virtual transmissions, cultural artefacts, ideas, flows of production, information, capital, waste and so on (Sheller and Urry 2006). This is all certainly relevant to both political economy and political ecology. However, in advance of a full theoretical account, the specific issue of political demography can be practically limited here to identifiable human mobilities since it still helps clarify an alternative way of looking at migration, travel, border crossings, population movements and cross-border transactions more generally, which is clearly transformative of the standard linear view of immigration, integration and citizenship (see also Cresswell 2006). The alternative view of political demography presented here also relates to the kinopolitics (politics of movement) identified by critical scholars similarly concerned with how states make migration visible and governable (Nail 2015; van Reekum 2019).

      Asylum seeking and refugee migration have long had their own governing logic – anchored in the specific statuses established by post-war international refugee law – although they have been frequently seen to collapse into ‘immigration’ in recent debates (Gibney 2004). Internal and cross-border displacements, and various forms of temporary and indentured labour mobility – often far from the western world as receiving society – further complicate the picture (Koser 2016). Ordinarily, these are not subject to integration thinking.

      On the other hand, different concerns may indeed apply to migrations between countries within empire-scale systems of governance, or across macro-regional common markets, which also do not (or should not necessarily) count as ‘immigration’. It can be argued that free-moving EU citizens within the single market space of the European Union, who retain their own nationality and enjoy a different kind of (European) citizenship as the basis of residency, rights and recognition, are not subject to integration when they settle in another country – until perhaps circumstances change, a border crosses them, and they become ‘immigrants’ needing to think about permanent settlement (Gonzales and Sigona 2017). Other historians would further complicate this and de-naturalize the normality of the narrow sliver of migration and mobilities that is viewed as state-sanctioned immigration in the contemporary СКАЧАТЬ