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Full Description
Human geopolitics, the competition for population rather than territory, is an essential but weakly understood dimension of world politics today. Such competition has preceded violent conflict throughout history, but has been muted since the Treaties of Westphalia laid the territorial foundations of the modern international system in the mid-seventeenth century. Today, however, human geopolitics is being resurrected in unanticipated ways, as governments are enabled and encouraged to engage their emigrant diasporas.
How and why is this happening? Until now these questions have been difficult to answer. The majority of research attention has focused on questions of immigration policy in a handful of wealthy migrant destination countries, largely ignoring the emigration policies that preoccupy the worlds many migrant origin states. This book addresses that research imbalance, by focusing on the overlooked sending side of migration policy.
Drawing on data covering all UN members across the post-WWII period, and fieldwork with high-level policy makers across 60 states and a dozen international organisations, the book charts the re-emergence of human geopolitics through the global spread of diaspora institutions government ministries and offices dedicated to emigrants and their descendants. It calls for the development of stronger guiding principles and evaluation frameworks to govern these new state-diaspora relations in an era of unprecedented global interdependence.
Contents
1: Human Geopolitics
2: The Global Rise of Diaspora Institutions
3: Exile Ingathering: An Exposition
4: Regime Shocks in India, Mexico, and Eritrea
5: Labour Export from the Asian Body Shops
6: Intercultural Borders in Europe and its Emulators
7: Human Geopolitics in the Black Sea and Beyond
8: Diaspora Engagement Goes Global
9: Orchestrating a Migration Regime
10: Following Diaspora Policies
11: Conclusion
pendix 1: Full List of Diaspora Institutions in the Study, with Sources
Appendix 2: Origin State Interviews and Formal Statements
Appendix 3: International Organisations and Donor States