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This book delves into how everyday bordering rules and practices used by states for migration governance impacts migrants access to social rights and shapes their post-migration life. It focuses on the interactions between institutional bodies, agents, and migrants of various profiles, highlighting how these dynamics condition migrants experiences and access to rights. This book offers significant insights into the complex relationship between access to social and fundamental rights and bordering practices, examined at various levels and from complementary perspectives. This book will be of special interest to scholars and students of migration studies and welfare studies, as well as practitioners working in the field of migration.
List of contents
Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: The question of intra-EU immigration in the British mainstream political discourse.- Chapter 3: Right to Shelter: Inside Spain s Foreigners Detention Centres.- Chapter 4: Surviving or Living: The Effect of Financial Barriers on Asylum Seekers Stuck in the UK Asylum.- Chapter 5: Negotiating pathways of incorporation: Migrants interaction with street level bureaucracy in Belgium.- Chapter 6: The Nexus Between Language Teaching and Migration Governance.- Chapter 7: Bordering Healthcare: Migrant and Healthcare Worker Experiences in Belgium and Germany.- Chapter 8: Conditioned on Belonging. Chapter 9: Conclusion.
About the author
Itır Aladağ Görentaş is an Associate Professor at the Faculty of Political Sciences, Department of International Relations at Kocaeli University, Turkey.
Marie Mallet-Garcia is Senior Researcher at the Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS), University of Oxford, UK.
Jérémy Mandinis Researcher and Lecturer at the Centre for Ethnic and Migration Studies (CEDEM) at the University of Liège, Belgium.
Elsa Mescoli is Lecturer at the Faculty of Social Sciences, affiliated with the CEDEM (Centre for the Study of Ethnicity and Migration) and the LASC (Social and Cultural Anthropology Laboratory) at the University of Liège, Belgium.
Buket Özdemir Dalis a Doctoral Candidate in Migration Studies at the Faculty of Political Sciences, Kocaeli University, Turkey.
Summary
This book delves into how everyday bordering—rules and practices used by states for migration governance—impacts migrants’ access to social rights and shapes their post-migration life. It focuses on the interactions between institutional bodies, agents, and migrants of various profiles, highlighting how these dynamics condition migrants’ experiences and access to rights. This book offers significant insights into the complex relationship between access to social and fundamental rights and bordering practices, examined at various levels and from complementary perspectives. This book will be of special interest to scholars and students of migration studies and welfare studies, as well as practitioners working in the field of migration.