ABSTRACT

Crisis and migration have a long association, in popular and policy discourse as well as in social scientific analysis. Despite the emergence of more nuanced and even celebratory accounts of mobility in recent years, there remains a persistent emphasis on migration being either a symptom or a cause of crisis. Moreover, in the context of a recent series of headline-hitting and politically controversial situations, terms like ‘migration crisis’ and ‘crisis migration’ are acquiring increasing currency among policy-makers and academics.

Crisis and Migration provides fresh perspectives on this routine association, critically examining a series of politically controversial situations around the world. Drawing on first-hand research into the Arab uprisings, conflict and famine in the Horn of Africa, cartel violence in Latin America, the global economic crisis, and immigration ‘crises’ from East Asia to Southern Africa to Europe, the book’s contributors situate a set of contemporary crises within longer histories of social change and human mobility, showing the importance of treating crisis and migration as contextualised processes, rather than isolated events.

By exploring how migration and crisis articulate as lived experiences and political constructs, the book brings migration from the margins to the centre of discussions of social transformation and crisis; illuminates the acute politicisation and diverse spatialisations of crisis–migration relationships; and urges a nuanced, cautious and critical approach to associations of crisis and migration.

chapter 1|23 pages

Exploring crisis and migration

Concepts and issues

chapter 4|20 pages

Criminal violence and displacement in Mexico

Evidence, perceptions and politics

chapter 5|22 pages

The global economic crisis and East Asian labour migration

A crisis of migration or struggles of labour?

chapter 7|22 pages

The social construction of (non-)crises and its effects

Government discourse on xenophobia, immigration and social cohesion in South Africa

chapter 8|23 pages

Imagined threats, manufactured crises and ‘real' emergencies

The politics of border closure in the face of mass refugee influx

chapter 9|22 pages

Crisis? Which crisis?

Families and forced migration