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Journal ArticleDOI

Diaspora Institutions and Diaspora Governance

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TLDR
This article reviewed and extended the relevant theoretical literature and highlighted empirical research priorities to explain how individual states tap diaspora resources and embrace these groups within the nation-state, arguing that existing studies focus too exclusively on national-level interests and ideas.
Abstract
Why do governments form institutions devoted to emigrants and their descendants in the diaspora? Such institutions have become a regular feature of political life in many parts of the world: Over half all United Nations Member States now have one. Diaspora institutions merit research because they connect new developments in the global governance of migration with new patterns of national and transnational sovereignty and citizenship, and new ways of constructing individual identity in relation to new collectivities. But these institutions are generally overlooked. Migration policy is still understood as immigration policy, and research on diaspora institutions has been fragmented, case-study dominated, and largely descriptive. In this article, I review and extend the relevant theoretical literature and highlight empirical research priorities. I argue that existing studies focus too exclusively on national-level interests and ideas to explain how individual states tap diaspora resources and embrace these groups within the nation-state. However, these approaches cannot explain the global spread of diaspora institutions. This, I argue, requires a comparative approach and greater attention to the role of efforts to create a coherent but decentralized system of global governance in the area of international migration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

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Citations
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The iron cage revisited: Institutional isomorphism and collective rationality in organizational fields (Chinese Translation)

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that rational actors make their organizations increasingly similar as they try to change them, and describe three isomorphic processes-coercive, mimetic, and normative.
Journal ArticleDOI

Explaining the Rise of Diaspora Institutions

TL;DR: The authors identify and then investigate empirical support for three theoretically-grounded perspectives on diaspora institution emergence and importance: instrumentally rational states tapping resources of emigrants and their descendants; value-rational states embracing lost members of the nation-state; institutionally-converging states governing diasporas consistent with global norms.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Migration State in the Global South: Nationalizing, Developmental and Neoliberal Models of Migration Management

TL;DR: In this paper, a typology of nationalizing, developmental, and neoliberal migration management regimes is proposed for cross-border migration in the Global South and discussed the implications of this analysis for comparative migration research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transnational Repression, Diaspora Mobilization, and the Case of The Arab Spring

TL;DR: This paper used data on Libyan and Syrian activism in the United States and Great Britain to identify the mechanisms by which Libyans and Syrians overcame these effects during the 2011 Arab Spring and demonstrated how states exercise coercive power across borders and the conditions under which diasporas mobilize to publicly and collectively challenge home-country regimes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sending States and the Making of Intra-Diasporic Politics: Turkey and Its Diaspora(s):

TL;DR: The multiple politics and identities of many contemporary diasporic configurations raise a number of important conceptual issues for the study of diaspora politics, including what counts as a "diaspora" as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

The iron cage revisited institutional isomorphism and collective rationality in organizational fields

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that rational actors make their organizations increasingly similar as they try to change them, and describe three isomorphic processes-coercive, mimetic, and normative.
Journal ArticleDOI

Introduction: epistemic communities and international policy coordination

TL;DR: In this article, a variety of analytic approaches have been used to address the problems of international cooperation, but the approaches have yielded only fragmentary insights, focusing on the technical aspects of a specific problem, how do they define state interests and develop viable solutions? What factors shape their behavior? Under conditions of uncertainty, what are the origins of international institutions? And how can we best study the processes through which international policy coordination and order emerge?
Journal ArticleDOI

International Norm Dynamics and Political Change

TL;DR: The authors argue that norms evolve in a three-stage "life cycle" of emergence, cascades, and internalization, and that each stage is governed by different motives, mechanisms, and behavioral logics.
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Greed and Grievance in Civil War

TL;DR: Collier and Hoeffler as discussed by the authors compare two contrasting motivations for rebellion: greed and grievance, and show that many rebellions are linked to the capture of resources (such as diamonds in Angola and Sierra Leone, drugs in Colombia, and timber in Cambodia).
Journal ArticleDOI

World society and the nation-state

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