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Challenging State Sovereignty in the Age of Migration: Concluding Remarks

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors examined the migration-sovereignty nexus in the context of intra-regional migration in Asia, with specific focus on Southeast Asia, and argued that state sovereignty in the area of migration is being challenged from multiple levels.
Abstract
\n This two-part Special Issue has examined the migration–sovereignty nexus in the context of intra-regional migration in Asia, with specific focus on Southeast Asia (‘Special Issue’). The sub-region represents the perfect laboratory for teasing out the complexities involved in (actual and rhetorical) attempts made by states to control and regulate migration in what has become a space characterised by increasing diversity of (collective and individual) actors operating at various levels. The diversity, complexity and breadth of migratory movements discussed in this Special Issue thus constitute one of the policy fields where the sovereignty norm clashes with the need to manage interdependence. The seven empirical studies in this Special Issue have examined current political, economic, social and legal dimensions of migration in Southeast Asia from an interdisciplinary perspective, linking the discussion of the migration–sovereignty nexus to ‘regional migration regimes’, ‘the transnational–national intersection’ and ‘grass-roots responses’. The common message that emerges from the papers in this issue—that state sovereignty in the area of migration is being challenged from multiple levels—leads us to argue for a future research agenda which would align the study of sovereignty more closely with governance studies as well as studies on norm diffusion. Such an agenda would contribute new insights into emerging forms of sovereignty beyond the confines of the state.

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TL;DR: In this article, the strengths and limits of regional approaches to refugee protection are analyzed in three regions; namely, the EU, Latin America and the Southeast Asian (SEA) region.
References
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Book

The Age of Migration

TL;DR: The third edition of the 3rd edition of as mentioned in this paper is the most comprehensive survey of international migration in the post-Cold-War era of globalization, focusing on the formation of ethnic minorities.
Book

Constructing a Security Community in Southeast Asia

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the future stability of the Southeast Asian and Asia Pacific region, including intra-regional relations and the effect of membership expansion, the ASEAN Regional Forum and East Asian regionalism.
BookDOI

The Migration Industry and the Commercialization of International Migration

TL;DR: Sorensen and Gammeltoft-Hansen as discussed by the authors discuss the role of non-state actors in the migration industry and the role played by the private border guard.