Abstract

In the field of migration politics, a dominant rhetoric argues that liberal immigration and asylum policies must be avoided because they will inevitably lead to anti-immigration backlashes that exacerbate the very conditions they were supposed to remedy. Drawing on the work of German sociologist Heinrich Popitz and empirical data on the aftereffects of the European migration crisis, the article criticizes this “rhetoric of reaction” (Albert Hirschman) for ignoring the many variables shaping the consequences of more open borders. Backlashes to immigration are real and pose a constraint for liberal immigration policies, but these backlashes are not necessarily politically successful. Societies react neither uniformly nor automatically to rising immigration. A critical variable is the fear engendered by the (real, expected, or imagined) arrival of large numbers of migrants, and this fear can be either ramped up to paranoid levels or calmed by a politics of hope aimed at restoring what Popitz called the “human openness to the world.”

Highlights

  • In April 2021, New York Times columnist Bret Stephens (2021) wrote an opinion piece in which he called on US President Joe Biden to “complete the wall” between the USA and Mexico in order to stop illegal border crossings

  • He argued, “the United States risks a version of the European migration crisis of 2015

  • Stephens rejects the short-lived open doors policy of some European Union member states such as Germany and Sweden toward desperate migrants from the Middle East and elsewhere, not because he thinks migrants are not worthy of our “compassion and respect,” but rather because he predicts that open borders will lead to a surge of anti-immigrant

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In April 2021, New York Times columnist Bret Stephens (2021) wrote an opinion piece in which he called on US President Joe Biden to “complete the wall” between the USA and Mexico in order to stop illegal border crossings. Keywords Affective politics · Fear · Heinrich Popitz · Migration crisis · Refugees · Rhetoric of reaction

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call