Foreigners, Refugees or Minorities?: Rethinking People in the Context of Border Controls and Visas by Didier Bigo

Foreigners, Refugees or Minorities?: Rethinking People in the Context of Border Controls and Visas

Didier Bigo
280 pages
Routledge
Feb 2013
Hardcover
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When immigration policy and the treatment of Roma collide in international relations there are surprising consequences which are revelatory of the underlying tensions between internal and external policies in the European Union. This book examines the relationship of citizenship, ethnicity and international relations and how these three aspects of the State, its people and its neighbours relate to one another. It studies the wide issue of international relations, citizenship and minority discrimination through the lens of the case study of European Roma who seek refugee status in Canada on account of their persecution in Europe. The volume assesses the relationships among citizenship, state protection and persecution and minority status, and how they can intersect with and destabilize foreign affairs. The central background to the book is the European treatment of Roma, their linkages with visa and asylum policies and their human rights repercussions . The various contributions reveal how modern liberal democracies can find themselves in contradictory positions concerning their citizens - when these are looking for protection abroad - and foreigners - in search of international protection - as a consequence of visa and pre-border surveillance policies and practices.
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About this book
Pages 280
Publisher Routledge
Published 2013
Readers 0