Abstract

The evolution of migration policymaking across the Global South is of growing interest to International Relations. Yet, the impact of colonial and imperial legacies on states’ migration management regimes outside Europe and North America remains under-theorised. How does postcolonial state formation shape policies of cross-border mobility management in the Global South? By bringing James F. Hollifield’s framework of the contemporary ‘migration state’ in conversation with critical scholarship on postcolonialism, we identify the existence of a ‘postcolonial paradox,’ namely two sets of tensions faced by newly independent states of the Global South: first, the need to construct a modern sovereign nation-state with a well-defined national identity contrasts with weak institutional capacity to do so; second, territorial realities of sovereignty conflict with the imperatives of nation-building seeking to establish exclusive citizenship norms towards populations residing both inside and outside the boundaries of the postcolonial state. We argue that the use of cross-border mobility control policies to reconcile such tensions transforms the ‘postcolonial state’ into the ‘postcolonial migration state,’ which shows distinct continuities with pre-independence practices. In fact, postcolonial migration states reproduce colonial-era tropes via the surveillance and control of segmented migration streams that redistribute labour for the global economy. We demonstrate this via a comparative study of post-independence migration management in India and Egypt, which also aims to merge a problematic regional divide between scholarship on the Middle East and South Asia. We urge further critical interventions on the international politics of migration that prioritise interregional perspectives from the broader Global South.

Highlights

  • As academic and policy debates on the International Relations of migration continue to be dominated by discussions of the impact of migrants and refugees on wealthy states across Europe and North America, it is easy to neglect that the majority of global crossborder mobility does not involve liberal democracies of the Global North

  • The creation of the postcolonial state is typically situated around the moment of independence from foreign rule, we demonstrate that the postcolonial migration state only emerges once states begin relying on migration control policies to resolve colonial-era tensions of citizenship, nation-building and territorial sovereignty

  • The study of migration in postcolonial contexts has produced a thriving scholarship across the social sciences, it has yet to occupy a central part of mainstream work in International Relations

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Summary

Introduction

As academic and policy debates on the International Relations of migration continue to be dominated by discussions of the impact of migrants and refugees on wealthy states across Europe and North America, it is easy to neglect that the majority of global crossborder mobility does not involve liberal democracies of the Global North. From 2010 to 2019, eight of the ten major bilateral migration corridors worldwide were located in states of the Global South (United Nations, 2019: 12). The manner through which colonial and imperial legacies affected the emergence of states’ migration management regimes outside Europe and North America continues to be under-theorised (Adamson and Tsourapas, 2019; Chung et al, 2018). As we identify here, these factors are essential to understanding the International Relations of cross-border mobility in the Global South

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