Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:796Hits:20008970Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID160576
Title ProperLabor Migrants as Political Leverage
Other Title InformationMigration Interdependence and Coercion in the Mediterranean
LanguageENG
AuthorTsourapas, Gerasimos
Summary / Abstract (Note)How do states attempt to use their position as destinations for labor migration to influence sending states, and under what conditions do they succeed? I argue that economically driven cross-border mobility generates reciprocal political economy effects on sending and host states. That is, it produces migration interdependence. Host states may leverage their position against a sending state by either deploying strategies of restriction—curbing remittances, strengthening immigration controls, or both—or displacement—forcefully expelling citizens of the sending state. These strategies’ success depends on whether the sending state is vulnerable to the political economy costs incurred by host states’ strategy, namely if it is unable to absorb them domestically and cannot procure the support of alternative host states. I also contend that displacement strategies involve higher costs than restriction efforts and are therefore more likely to succeed. I demonstrate my claims through a least-likely, two-case study design of Libyan and Jordanian coercive migration diplomacy against Egypt in the aftermath of the Arab Spring. I examine how two weaker Arab states leveraged their position against Egypt, a stronger state but one vulnerable to migration interdependence, through the restriction and displacement of Egyptian migrants.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Studies Quarterly Vol. 62, No.2; Jun 2018: p.383–395
Journal SourceInternational Studies Quarterly Vol: 62 No 2
Key WordsLabor Migrants ;  Migration Interdependence ;  Political Leverage ;  Coercion in the Mediterranean


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text