Abstract

One measure of how and whether the COVID-19 pandemic reshapes the emerging field of international migration law will be the extent to which transnational civil society and activist movements can counteract the intensification of state border controls that the pandemic has triggered. Before the pandemic, transnational efforts to establish a new normative framework for migration seemed to be accelerating. These efforts included new, if non-binding, global compacts on refugees and migration, and new, if modest, efforts at facilitating global cooperation, alongside innovative approaches to scholarly engagement. Such developments arguably contributed to an emerging framework for protecting migrants under international law. Has the pandemic defeated this potential? State responses to the pandemic have eschewed multilateralism, brought migration to a near standstill, and ignored well-established human rights obligations. Moreover, states are poised to deploy a range of new border management technologies and even more assertively manage migration in the name of “health proofing” borders. Yet at the same time, some progressive state practices have emerged alongside a call from the UN Secretary-General to “reimagine human mobility for the benefit of all.” In this essay, we chart some areas of potentially progressive expansion beyond the status quo, noting not only the substance but also the process by which these norms are emerging.

Highlights

  • One measure of how and whether the COVID-19 pandemic reshapes the emerging field of international migration law will be the extent to which transnational civil society and activist movements can counteract the intensification of state border controls that the pandemic has triggered

  • A vantage point more critical of the human rights frame generally has argued that pursuing the goal of “global cooperation,” as it has emerged in the migration context, has not redounded to migrants’ benefit, and instead has facilitated or at least legitimated schemes of border control and repatriation.[7]

  • If the substance and architecture of international migration law have reached an inflection point, where do we go from here? We argue that any normative shift should start with a reexamination of sovereignty and a commitment to a migration politics built from the perspective of interdependence

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Summary

An Opportunity for Progressive Development of the Law?

The COVID-19 pandemic has provided an object lesson in the nature of international migration law. This law has been portrayed by scholars as “a work in progress” and “substance without architecture.”[4] The status quo remains a system marked by failed multilateralism and legal fragmentation. Introduction to Symposium on Framing Global Migration Law, 111 AJIL UNBOUND 1 (2017). UN Network on Migration, Webinar, COVID-19 and People on the Move 2020 (June 2020). UN Secretary-General, Policy Brief: COVID-19 and People on the Move (June 2020). Vincent Chetail, The Architecture of International Migration Law, 111 AJIL UNBOUND 18, 21 (2017); T.

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