Unravelling Europe's 'Migration Crisis'

Unravelling Europe's 'Migration Crisis'
Title Unravelling Europe's 'Migration Crisis' PDF eBook
Author Crawley, Heaven
Publisher Policy Press
Total Pages 200
Release 2018
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1447343212

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The past few years have seen an unprecedented mass migration to Europe, as refugees from war and poverty throughout north Africa and the Middle East have embarked on perilous journeys across the Mediterranean in the hope of being allowed to start new lives in Europe. This book draws on more than five hundred firsthand accounts to reveal the human story behind the statistics and demagoguery. What is it like to set out for Europe with your family, knowing the dangers you face on the way? Why are so many people willing to risk their lives crossing the Mediterranean? What are their hopes and fears? And why is Europe, one of the richest regions of the world, unable to cope? More than just telling a human story, Heaven Crawley and colleagues provide a framework for understanding the dynamics underpinning the current wave of migration and challenging politicians, policy makers, and the media to rethink their understanding of why and how people move. --

Unravelling Europe’s ‘migration crisis’

Unravelling Europe’s ‘migration crisis’
Title Unravelling Europe’s ‘migration crisis’ PDF eBook
Author Crawley, Heaven
Publisher Policy Press
Total Pages 200
Release 2017-12-13
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1447343239

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What is it like to travel to Europe over land and sea in order to secure a future for yourself and your family? Why are so many people willing to risk their lives crossing the Mediterranean? What are their hopes and fears? And why is Europe, one of the richest regions of the world, unable to cope? Drawing on compelling first-hand accounts from 500 people who arrived on the shores of Europe in 2015, this important new book unpacks their routes, experiences and decisions. It provides a framework for understanding the dynamics underpinning recent unprecedented levels of migration across, and loss of life in, the Mediterranean, casting new light on the ‘migration crisis’ and challenging politicians, policy makers and the media to rethink their understanding of why and how people move.

Unravelling Europe's 'migration crisis'

Unravelling Europe's 'migration crisis'
Title Unravelling Europe's 'migration crisis' PDF eBook
Author Heaven Crawley
Publisher
Total Pages 0
Release 2023
Genre Emigration and immigration
ISBN

Download Unravelling Europe's 'migration crisis' Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Provides a framework for understanding the dynamics underpinning recent unprecedented levels of migration across, and loss of life in, the Mediterranean, casting new light on the 'migration crisis' and challenging politicians, policy makers and the media to rethink their understanding of why and how people move.

Unravelling Europe's 'migration Crisis'

Unravelling Europe's 'migration Crisis'
Title Unravelling Europe's 'migration Crisis' PDF eBook
Author Heaven Crawley
Publisher
Total Pages 183
Release 2017
Genre Emigration and immigration
ISBN 9781447343240

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Small States and the European Migrant Crisis

Small States and the European Migrant Crisis
Title Small States and the European Migrant Crisis PDF eBook
Author Tómas Joensen
Publisher Springer Nature
Total Pages 293
Release 2021-04-26
Genre Political Science
ISBN 3030662039

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This edited book examines the experience of small states in Europe during the 2015–2016 migration crisis. The contributions highlight the challenges small states and the European Union faced in addressing the massive irregular flow of migrants and refugees into Europe and the Schengen Area. Small states adopted a number of coping strategies and proved relatively effective in navigating the storm they faced. Externally they pursued strategies of shelter-seeking, hiding, hedging and norm entrepreneurship, while domestically they tended to securitize migration and to pursue scapegoating by blaming the EU and other states for the nature and magnitude of the crisis. During this crisis management, their small administrations proved resilient and flexible in their responses, despite suffering from limited resources and being subject to the shifting preferences of stronger actors. This book shows that independent of whether we view the migration crisis as a crisis for the European Union or Europe as a whole, or how we interpret the intensity and severity of the crisis, this was a crisis for small states in Europe. The crisis disrupted the liberal and institutionalized order upon which small states in the region had increasingly based their policies and influence for more than 60 years.

Crossing Borders

Crossing Borders
Title Crossing Borders PDF eBook
Author Heather A. Conley
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages 79
Release 2018-09-15
Genre Political Science
ISBN 1442280832

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In recent years, Europe has seen its largest influx of migrants and refugees in decades, with 1.9 million arrivals to the continent between 2014 and 2017. Peak arrivals in 2015, and sustained flows since then, have found the European Union and its 28 member states unable to face what has been called the “European migration crisis.” Part of their response has focused on cooperation with third countries of transit or origin, by leveraging development, humanitarian, and foreign policy tools to try and reduce migrant flows to Europe, including through many funding and budgetary decisions. This report attempts to quantify, through budgetary analysis, what shifts occurred in the external dimension of Europe’s migration policy following the crisis, and in three member states (Germany, Sweden, and the Netherlands). These short-term shifts, representing policy priorities, carry long-term consequences for the European Union’s role as a foreign policy and soft power actor.

Bordered Lives

Bordered Lives
Title Bordered Lives PDF eBook
Author Hsiao-Hung Pai
Publisher New Internationalist
Total Pages 166
Release 2018-04-17
Genre Political Science
ISBN 1780264399

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The headlines about Europe’s migration crisis have now subsided, though they continue to influence the political agenda all over the continent. Though there are moments when the human reality cuts through, as with the shocking picture of Alan Kurdi’s body on the beach, for the most part the individual stories are lost amid the hysteria over cutting migrant numbers and shutting the doors of Fortress Europe. Award-winning journalist Hsiao-Hung Pai specializes in communicating poignant human stories that many people find it convenient to keep out ofsight and out of mind. She travels to meet migrants and asylum-seekers who have just been washed up on the shores of Lampedusa or Sicily and have been absorbed into dismal reception camps. While journalists ordinarily pitch up in such places and file their colour pieces before moving on to the next hot topic, Hsiao-Hung follows through, staying in touch with some of those she encounters – many of them children – throughout their journeys: into mainland Italy, to Germany where they face harassment from far-right groups, and to the appalling conditions in the camps on the coast of northwest France