Abstract

This manuscript claims that national migration policies are limited by some externalities. These limitations are so powerful and they nearly let national governments decision-making about migration policies. In the last decade, Turkey, struggling with enormous immigration inflows, is the most obvious example of this situation. On one side, some international organizations forcing Turkey to be their policy instrument, and on the other side, Turkey tries to keeping some tenets like humanitarian diplomacy policy and some human rights agreements. In addition to these restrictions, there are others already accepted in the literature of decision-making on public policy. In conclusion, the manuscript is dissolving Turkey’s possibilities about migration policymaking with descriptive method and under coercive externalities, it reaches that is difficult to design a rational migrant policy.

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