TY - BOOK AU - Geiger,Martin AU - Pecoud,Antoine TI - The politics of international migration management T2 - Migration, minorities, and citizenship SN - 9780230272583 (alk. paper) U1 - 325 22 PY - 2012/// CY - Hampshire, New York PB - Palgrave Macmillan KW - International Organization for Migration KW - BUEsh KW - Emigration and immigration KW - Government policy KW - BUSBOL KW - October2015 KW - Reading book N1 - Index : p. 295-305; Includes bibliographical references; The politics of international migration management / Martin Geiger and Antoine P�ecoud -- Liberalizing movements? The political rationality of global migration management / Sara Kalm -- For the benefit of some : the international organization for migration and its global migration management / Fabian Georgi -- Imagined migration world : the European Union's anti-illegal immigration discourse / William Walters -- 'We are facilitating states!' An ethnographic analysis of the ICMPD / Sabine Hess -- Borders and populations in flux : Frontex's place in the European Union's migration management / Bernd Kasparek -- Mobility, development, protection, EU-integration! The IOM's national migration strategy for Albania / Martin Geiger -- Expanded borders : policies and practices of preventive refoulement in Italy / Chiara Marchetti -- Informing migrants to manage migration? An analysis of IOM's information campaigns / Antoine P�ecoud -- Migration policy development in Mauritania : process, issues and actors / Philippe Poutignat and Jocelyne Streiff-F�enart -- International refugee law, 'hyper-legalism' and migration management : the Pacific solution / Claire Inder -- Refugees or migrants? The UNHCR's comprehensive approach to Afghan mobility into Iran and Pakistan / Giulia Scalettaris -- From 'the whole enchilada' to financialization : shifting discourses of migration management in North America / Matt Bakker N2 - International migration management' is a new concept for understanding and rethinking migration flows. Throughout the world, governments and intergovernmental organizations, such as the International Organization for Migration, are developing new approaches aimed at renewing migration policy-making. This includes calls for cooperation between governments to govern migration flows; an understanding that migration is a normal process in a globalizing world rather than a problem; a 'post-control' spirit that goes beyond the restrictions on peoples' mobility to draft proactive policies; and a promotion of holistic approaches to migration, not only centred on security or labour, but also on development and human rights. -- Back cover ER -