ABSTRACT

Nation States now increasingly have to cope with large numbers of non-citizens living within their borders. This has largely been understood in terms of the decline of the nation state or of increasing globalisation, but in Managing Migration Lydia Morris argues that it throws up more complex questions. In the context of the European Union the terms of debate about immigration, legislation governing entry, and the practice of regulation reveal a set of competing concerns, including: *anxiety about the political affiliation of migrants *a clash between commitment to equal treatment and the desire to protect national resources *human rights obligations alongside restrictions on entry.
The outcome of these clashes is presented in terms of an increasingly complex system of civic stratification. The book then moves on to examine the way in which abstract notions of rights map on to lived experiences when filtered through other forms of difference such as race and gender. This book will be essential reading for students and researchers working in the areas of migration and the study of the European Union.
Lydia Morris is Professor of Sociology at the University of Essex.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|18 pages

A cluster of contradictions

The politics of migration in the European Union

chapter 2|25 pages

Rights and controls in the management of migration

The case of Germany

chapter 3|27 pages

The ambiguous terrain of rights

Italy’s emergent immigration regime

chapter 4|23 pages

The shifting contours of rights

Britain’s asylum and immigration regime

chapter 5|19 pages

Stratified rights and the management of migration

National distinctiveness in Europe

chapter 6|21 pages

Gender, race and the embodiment of rights

chapter 7|16 pages

Managing contradiction

Civic stratification and migrants’ rights