edited by Alexander Betts
Unlike many other trans-boundary policy areas,
international migration lacks coherent global governance. There is no UN
migration organization and states have signed relatively few multilateral
treaties on migration. Instead sovereign states generally decide their own
immigration policies. However, given the growing politicisation of migration
and the recognition that states cannot always address migration in isolation
from one another, a debate has emerged about what type of international
institutions and cooperation are required to meet the challenges of
international migration. Until now, though, that emerging debate on global
migration governance has lacked a clear analytical understanding of what global
migration governance actually is, the politics underlying it, and the basis on
which we can make claims about what 'better' migration governance might look like.
In order to address this gap, the book brings together
a group of the world's leading experts on migration to consider the global
governance of different aspects of migration. The chapters offer an accessible
introduction to the global governance of low-skilled labour migration,
high-skilled labour migration, irregular migration, lifestyle migration,
international travel, refugees, internally displaced persons, human trafficking
and smuggling, diaspora, remittances, and root causes. Each of the chapters
explores the three same broad questions: What, institutionally, is the global
governance of migration in that area? Why, politically, does that type of
governance exist? How, normatively, can we ground claims about the type of
global governance that should exist in that area? Collectively, the chapters
enhance our understanding of the international politics of migration and set
out a vision for international cooperation on migration.