Child Migration in the US and Spain: Towards a Global Border Regime?

In The New Politics of Immigration, Professor Catherine Dauvergne proposes that as migration policies converge at the global level, the traditional difference between settler societies and former European colonies is becoming irrelevant. To test this argument, this article addresses the impact of ex...

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Veröffentlicht in:International migration 2020-12, Vol.58 (6), p.29-44
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description In The New Politics of Immigration, Professor Catherine Dauvergne proposes that as migration policies converge at the global level, the traditional difference between settler societies and former European colonies is becoming irrelevant. To test this argument, this article addresses the impact of externalization, militarization, detention and deportation on unaccompanied migrant children along the southern Spanish and US borders. I conclude that the combined used of these strategies is designed to keep all unwanted migrants away from the physical border of the state, regardless of their background, and prevents children from accessing specific protections. Current border policy in these two countries shows the primacy of national security concerns over human rights and supports Dauvergne’s argument that distinctions between former colonies and settler societies are disappearing. The evidence considered here points towards an increasingly restrictive and punitive global border regime, but one with regional variations.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; Political Science Complete; Wiley Online Library All Journals
subjects Borders
Children
Colonies
Colonies & territories
Deportation
Detention
Human rights
Human security
Immigration
Immigration policy
Migrants
Migration
Militarization
National security
Politics
Primacy
Regional variations
Security
Unaccompanied
title Child Migration in the US and Spain: Towards a Global Border Regime?
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