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      Tunisia’s migration politics throughout the 2011 revolution: revisiting the democratisation–migrant rights nexus

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      Third World Quarterly
      Informa UK Limited

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          Modes of immigration politics in liberal democratic states.

          G Freeman (1995)
          "The politics of immigration in liberal democracies exhibits strong similarities that are, contrary to the scholarly consensus, broadly expansionist and inclusive. Nevertheless, three groups of states display distinct modes of immigration politics. Divergent immigration histories mold popular attitudes toward migration and ethnic heterogeneity and affect the institutionalization of migration policy and politics....I begin by discussing those characteristics of immigration politics found in all liberal democracies. I then investigate the distinctive modes of immigration politics in the three subsets of Western democratic states with distinctive immigration histories. I conclude by considering whether these three patterns will persist or how they might change as a result of future migration pressures and the further institutionalization of immigration politics and policies in Europe." Comments by Rogers Brubaker (pp. 903-8) and a rejoinder by the author (pp. 909-13) are included.
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            Why Liberal States Accept Unwanted Immigration

            This article explores why liberal states accept unwanted immigration, discussing the cases of illegal immigration in the United States and family immigration in Europe. Rejecting the diagnosis of state sovereignty undermined by globalization, the author argues that self-limited sovereignty explains why states accept unwanted immigration. One aspect of self-limited sovereignty is a political process under the sway of interest-group politics (“client politics,” as Gary Freeman says). The logic of client politics explains why the United States accepts illegal immigration. The case of family immigration in Europe suggests two further aspects of self-limited sovereignty: legal-constitutional constraints on the executive, and moral obligations toward historically particular immigrant groups. However, these legal and moral constraints are unevenly distributed across Europe, partially reflecting the different logics of guest worker and postcolonial immigration regimes.
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              Culling the Masses

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Third World Quarterly
                Third World Quarterly
                Informa UK Limited
                0143-6597
                1360-2241
                July 09 2021
                : 1-19
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Institute of Political Science, University of Leiden, Leiden, The Netherlands
                Article
                10.1080/01436597.2021.1940126
                66f7d994-acfd-47ad-8e13-edffc07e2e80
                © 2021

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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