Hard borders and soft agreements: Evaluating governance within the Global Compact for Migration
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Routledge
Access
openAccess
Embargo end date
Citation
Susan P. Murphy, Hard borders and soft agreements: Evaluating governance within the Global Compact for Migration, Third World Quarterly, 44, 3, 2023, 460 - 477
Abstract
Welcomed as a milestone in the governance of transnational migration, the adoption of the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly, and Regular Migration marked a significant step forward in international cooperation on migration governance. Through a critical evaluation of its normative and structural features, this paper evaluates the strengths, weaknesses, tensions and contradictions within the compact. It finds that the compact is marked by innovative and ambitious objectives and gives recognition to the diversity and complexity of migration practices. However, its amplification of state sovereignty, its perpetuation of classical liberal statist ideals, and its ambiguity concerning the social-structural and institutional conditions necessary to protect migrants’ rights and interests risk undermining its implementation and effectiveness. The paper argues that this framework is best understood as a progressive neoliberal model that relies on the virtue of states over legal and justice-based institutional mechanisms for its authority and implementation. This model risks reinforcing status quo power relations and is insufficient to achieve its stated objectives.
Description
PUBLISHED
New York
New York
Collections
Endorsement
Review
Supplemented By
Referenced By
Author's Homepage: http://people.tcd.ie/murphs64
Other Titles: Handbook of Philosophy and Poverty
Publisher: Routledge
Type of material: Journal Article

