Immigration Policy as Foreign Policy
Abstract
Immigration policy has taken centre stage in the social sciences over the past 20 years. Despite the proliferation of articles and books in this field, very little attention has been paid to immigration policy as foreign policy. It is domestic policy that prevails in the literature, most notably about the effects of immigration on destination societies. This article distinguishes the domestic and foreign policy aspects of immigration policy, acknowledging as it does so that foreign policy is virtually always an expression of national self-interest. It concludes with observations on the realist and idealist/liberal approaches to international relations theory including with respect to the recently adopted United Nations Global Compact for Safe, Orderly, and Regular Migration and the United Nations Global Compact on Refugees. Its purpose is to draw attention to this neglected aspect of immigration policy and to encourage others to explore it in greater detail, from the perspectives of both individual states and the world’s international institutions.
Keywords
Migration Policy, International Relations, Foreign Policy, Sovereignty, Managed Migration
Citation
Howard Duncan, “Immigration Policy as Foreign Policy”, Uluslararasi Iliskiler, Vol. 17, No. 68, 2020, pp. 5-20, DOI: 10.33458/uidergisi.856880
Affiliations
Prof. Dr., Carleton University, Migration and Diaspora Studies, Ottawa, Canada