darshan vigneswaran - home - mpi-mmg vigneswaran (university of amsterdam) “migration control and...

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mpimmg Max-Planck-Institut zur Erforschung multireligiöser und multiethnischer Gesellschaften MAX PLANCK INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF RELIGIOUS AND ETHNIC DIVERSITY Hermann-Föge-Weg 11 • 37073 Göngen • Tel: 0551/4956-0 [email protected] • www.mmg.mpg.de Winter 2017/18 Library Hall, Hermann-Föge-Weg 11 O PEN L ECTURES Contact: Doris Büthe Tel: 0551/4956-131 [email protected] Monday, 23 October 2017, 14:15-16:00 Darshan Vigneswaran (University of Amsterdam) “Migration control and global governance: an emergent international regime?” We are in the midst of an enduring global migraon crisis. This is not a crisis facing governments but a crisis of governance: consisng of a growing gap between rising expectaons that governments should control migrants and the persistent reality of large scale informal migraon. This crisis demands a working internaonal migraon regime. Unfortunately, we can’t begin to build such a regime because we don’t know if one already exists, and if so, how it works. Is there an internaonal migraon control regime? How does it work? What reforms might help build a regime that could resolve the crisis? The biggest unresolved puzzles facing our efforts to understand the nature, status and extent of an internaonal migraon control regime lie in the Global South. We know that the receiving states in the global north share common interests vis-a-vis migraon, and commonly work together towards common ends. Migrant states have few incenves to control migraon, yet they oſten do. We do not know why. More specifically, we have yet to explain why collaboraon on internaonal migraon control a) began in the Global South - parts of the world that have rarely produced ideals of legimate state pracce; b) spread across the world in the absence of an internaonal migraon organizaon that could call recalcitrant states to account; and c) remains strong in countries where the state has generally lacked the capacity to serve basic funcons. This talk will outline my preliminary efforts to resolve these puzzles, and thereby provide a beer account of the nature, status and future of the internaonal migraon control regime. DarSHan VIGneSWaran is the Co-Director of the Instute for Migraon and ethnic Studies and assistant Professor at the Department of Polical Science, University of amsterdam.

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Page 1: Darshan Vigneswaran - Home - MPI-MMG Vigneswaran (University of Amsterdam) “Migration control and global governance: an emergent international regime?” We are in the midst of an

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Max-Planck-Institut zur Erforschung multireligiöser und multiethnischer GesellschaftenMax Planck InstItutE for thE study of rElIGIous and EthnIc dIvErsIt yHermann-Föge-Weg 11 • 37073 Göttingen • Tel: 0551/4956-0 [email protected] • www.mmg.mpg.de

Winter 2017/18

Library Hall, Hermann-Föge-Weg 11

Open Lectures

contact:doris Büthe

tel: 0551/[email protected]

Monday, 23 October 2017, 14:15-16:00

Darshan Vigneswaran (University of Amsterdam)

“Migration control and global governance: an emergent international regime?”

We are in the midst of an enduring global migration crisis. This is not a crisis facing governments but a crisis of governance: consisting of a growing gap between rising expectations that governments should control migrants and the persistent reality of large scale informal migration. This crisis demands a working international migration regime. Unfortunately, we can’t begin to build such a regime because we don’t know if one already exists, and if so, how it works. Is there an international migration control regime? How does it work? What reforms might help build a regime that could resolve the crisis? The biggest unresolved puzzles facing our efforts to understand the nature, status and extent of an international migration control regime lie in the Global South. We know that the receiving states in the global north share common interests vis-a-vis migration, and commonly work together towards common ends. Migrant states have few incentives to control migration, yet they often do. We do not know why. More specifically, we have yet to explain why collaboration on international migration control a) began in the Global South - parts of the world that have rarely produced ideals of legitimate state practice; b) spread across the world in the absence of an international migration organization that could call recalcitrant states to account; and c) remains strong in countries where the state has generally lacked the capacity to serve basic functions. This talk will outline my preliminary efforts to resolve these puzzles, and thereby provide a better account of the nature, status and future of the international migration control regime.

DarSHan VIGneSWaran is the Co-Director of the Institute for Migration and ethnic Studies and assistant Professor at the Department of Political Science, University of amsterdam.