
Knowledge, Power, and Migration
Description
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Knowledge, Power, and Migration assembles researchers from across the divide to question the ways in which research practices can change the conversation on immigration. It encourages a necessary curiosity about how scholarship in the field can shape global, social, and epistemic justice. Migration is a constant in human history, but the sharp decline in permanent resettlement options, increasingly selective criteria, and violent enforcement measures of the twenty-first century constitute a crisis of immigration policy. Only by redressing the inequalities it shares with global governance structures can the discipline confront this historic challenge.
Research on immigration can occasion reflections and practices that challenge epistemic injustices. Knowledge, Power, and Migration contributes to this ongoing project while offering insights on the practical organization of new forms of dialogue on migration in a largely unequal world.
Reviews / Votes
"Knowledge, Power, and Migration makes a significant contribution to decolonizing knowledge production, a critical and emerging theme across the social sciences. It offers valuable insights for policymakers, encouraging them to unlearn entrenched perspectives, challenging and expanding their understanding of global issues." Dereje Feyissa, College of Law and Governance, Addis Ababa University "A fascinating and ambitious volume that will inform and challenge students and researchers. Its introduction offers a robust methodology for confronting the North/South divide, and its contributors demonstrate the richness of that tool." Catherine Dauvergne, Peter A. Allard School of Law, University of British ColumbiaMore details
Other editions
Additional editions

Persons
Mireille Paquet is Concordia University Research Chair on the Politics of Immigration.
Ethel Tungohan is Canada Research Chair in Canadian Migration Policy, Impacts and Activism at York University.
Content
- Cover
- KNOWLEDGE, POWER, AND MIGRATION
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Tables and Figures
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction | Knowledge, Power, and Migration: An Overview
- - PART ONE - Migration Politics at the Micro-Level: Narratives of Migrant and Refugee Experiences of Migration, Resettlement, and Resistance
- 1 Defunding UNRWA, Palestinian Refugee Status, and the Right of Return
- 2 Survival Strategies of Border Communities: A Case Study of North-East Nigeria
- 3 Comparative Perspectives on Exile: Survival Strategies of Syrians in Turkey and Jordan
- 4 Immigration, Suffering, and Racialized Immigrant Women's Mental Health Challenges
- 5 The Unmet Expectations of Love and Labour: Migrant Care Workers as Part of the Family
- - PART TWO - Migration Politics at the State Level: State Policies in Migration Governance
- 6 Migrant Care Worker Policies in Taiwan and South Korea
- 7 Post-Return Migration Policies in Latin America: A Global South Approach
- 8 Human Rights at Risk? An Analysis of Asylum Policy Changes in Germany between 1949 and 2019
- 9 Diversity of Asylum Policies among German Länder: What Can Be Learned from the Debate on Immigration Federalism?
- 10 Evolution of Citizenship Law in Luxembourg: Drivers and Changes
- - PART THREE - Migration Politics at the Regional and Transnational Level: Toward a Multilateral Approach to Migration
- 11 Exploring Migration Challenges in Europe after 2014: What Is the Direction of EU Migration Management and Policy?
- 12 The African Union's Governance of Irregular Migration: A Critical Approach to a Regional Policy of Migration Governance
- 13 Labour Migration in the South Asia-Gulf Migration Corridor: Managing Old and New Risks after COVID-19
- 14 The Kafala as an Assemblage of (Non)Citizenship: Rethinking the "Exceptionality" of the Arab Gulf States' Migration Model
- Afterword | Beyond Knowledge, Power, and Migration
- Contributors
- Index
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