Specialists and academics in the
field of immigration often complain that human migration is a global or
regional phenomenon that is usually dealt with on a national level. The regulations and enforcement mechanisms of
national immigration laws are generally considered clumsy tools for managing international
migration flows. No academic conference
on modern migration passes without a discussion of the state as an appropriate
or inappropriate level of analysis.
Beyond academic debate, it is becoming clear that states are
increasingly sharing the responsibility for their migration policies with other
actors, both state and non-state. This
reality is at odds with the popular nationalist discourses used in most
countries to justify and promote immigration laws.
One telling example has been the
European Union (EU) effort to secure bilateral agreements with neighboring non-EU
countries, conscripting them into enforcing EU immigration policy. This outsourcing
of immigration enforcement to North Africa has ostensibly had a negative
impact on human rights and the treatment of migrants moving from Africa to the
EU. These treaties often induce
under-resourced countries to implement rudimentary immigrant control
schemes. These systems foster abuse in
the form of inadequate detention conditions, access to legal recourse, social
benefits and healthcare among others. For
example, UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights of migrants, Prof. François
Crépeau, found that bilateral
cooperation between Italy and Libya was heavily geared toward curbing
migration to Italy. He found that
training and funds superficially dedicated to high seas rescue were also being
used to increase interdiction of EU-bound migrants. He found that given the poor record of human
rights abuses against migrants in Libya, no intercepted migrants should be
returned to that country against their will.
In
his visit to Turkey, Prof. Crépeau, found that the focus on securitizing
the border and reducing irregular immigration came at the expense of human
rights concerns.
Another
formal arrangement demonstrating the outsourcing or off-shoring of
international border enforcement is the Australia-Papa New Guinea “Regional
Resettlement Arrangement.” This
agreement, discussed in more detail in an earlier post, essentially designates PNG
as the off-shore detention facility for individuals seeking asylum in
Australia. The
UNHCR has said that the agreement
“raises serious, and so far unanswered, protection questions”. The Australian
government lauds the agreement as a meaningful step to reduce the flow of
migrants taking to the sea to seek asylum in Australia.
A
similar trend is underway in the United States with regard to the southern
border, however, marked by far less coordination or formal negotiation. Mexico has been reforming its immigration laws,
revising its visa categories and attempting to control irregular transmigration
to the United States as well as bolstering human rights protections for
migrants. However, the Mexican
government has been carrying
out raids, paralleling those in the US and EU, to apprehend irregular
migrants from Central America. Such
raids, carried out along well-known routes of north-bound migration, suggest an
externalization of the US-Mexico border.
At a time when net migration from Mexico to the US has reached zero,
Central Americans now represent the fastest
growing segment of the Latin American immigrant population in the US. As the Mexican government seeks to pivot away
from the narco-migrant dialectic of its diplomatic relationship with the US,
recasting Mexico’s role as border enforcement collaborator may be a beneficial
alternative.
In all of the examples given above, the principal actors have been states. However, the outsourcing of migration policies also involves non-state actors. One of the most important has been the airlines. One of the principal methods of entry for irregular immigrants in developed countries is to enter legally on a visa and then overstay. Thus, controls at ports of entry, particularly airports, are a key aspect of border enforcement for these countries. Migration laws in migrant destination countries are converging and imposing fines on airlines who allow passengers to board who do not have proper entry documents. For example, in the US, the Customs and Border Protection agency requires airlines to transmit passenger information for all passengers on a given flight. Failure to comply can result in fines of $5,000 for each infraction. Examples of non-state actors taking on roles in immigration enforcement will likely multiply as states retrench under budgetary pressures. As long as security and fear govern migration policy in the global popular consciousness, new actors and new revenue streams will spring up. In the meantime, states will continue to seek methods of externalizing and “outsourcing” their immigration policies.
In all of the examples given above, the principal actors have been states. However, the outsourcing of migration policies also involves non-state actors. One of the most important has been the airlines. One of the principal methods of entry for irregular immigrants in developed countries is to enter legally on a visa and then overstay. Thus, controls at ports of entry, particularly airports, are a key aspect of border enforcement for these countries. Migration laws in migrant destination countries are converging and imposing fines on airlines who allow passengers to board who do not have proper entry documents. For example, in the US, the Customs and Border Protection agency requires airlines to transmit passenger information for all passengers on a given flight. Failure to comply can result in fines of $5,000 for each infraction. Examples of non-state actors taking on roles in immigration enforcement will likely multiply as states retrench under budgetary pressures. As long as security and fear govern migration policy in the global popular consciousness, new actors and new revenue streams will spring up. In the meantime, states will continue to seek methods of externalizing and “outsourcing” their immigration policies.
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