Migration in the Mediterranean : mechanisms of international cooperation / edited by Francesca Ippolito and Seline Trevisanut (University of Calgary, University of Utrecht).
2015
K3275 .M537 2016 (Map It)
Available at Cellar
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Title
Migration in the Mediterranean : mechanisms of international cooperation / edited by Francesca Ippolito and Seline Trevisanut (University of Calgary, University of Utrecht).
Published
Cambridge, United Kingdom : Cambridge University Press, 2015.
Copyright
©2015
Call Number
K3275 .M537 2016
ISBN
9781107087859 (hardback)
1107087856 (hardback)
1107087856 (hardback)
Description
x, 332 pages ; 24 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)947808385
Summary
"Mediterranean states have developed various cooperation mechanisms in order to cope with the issues that arise from migration. This book critically analyses how institutional actors act and interact on the international scene in the control and management of migration in the Mediterranean. It highlights how, even though the involvement of 'universal' international organisations guarantees a certain balance in setting the goals of cooperation mechanisms and buttresses a certain coherence of the actions, the protection of migrants' fundamental rights is still an objective as opposed to a reality, and security imperatives and trends still prevail in the aftermath of the 2011 Arab Spring"-- Provided by publisher.
"The Mediterranean Sea has always been a route for migration. For centuries caravans have crossed its waters for the most diverse reasons: commerce, war, pilgrimage, cultural exchange, etc. In the last decades, these same waters constitute the scenery of what appears as a never ending tragedy, irregular migration and the thousands of related deaths. According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and the International Organization for Migration (IOM), 2014 has been so far the deadliest year for the Mediterranean, with nearly 1,900 migrants lost their lives, compared to the 700 recorded in 2013 and about 500 recorded in 2012"-- Provided by publisher.
"The Mediterranean Sea has always been a route for migration. For centuries caravans have crossed its waters for the most diverse reasons: commerce, war, pilgrimage, cultural exchange, etc. In the last decades, these same waters constitute the scenery of what appears as a never ending tragedy, irregular migration and the thousands of related deaths. According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and the International Organization for Migration (IOM), 2014 has been so far the deadliest year for the Mediterranean, with nearly 1,900 migrants lost their lives, compared to the 700 recorded in 2013 and about 500 recorded in 2012"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
List of contributors
vii
Introduction / Seline Trevisanut
1
pt. I
Multilevel cooperation in the Mediterranean
13
1.
Conceptualising a migrant's rights-based EuroMed cooperation: political, legal and judicial rationale / Francesca Ippolito
15
2.
EuroMed, migration and frenemy-ship: pretending to deepen cooperation across the Mediterranean / Dimitry Kochenov
43
3.
League of Arab States and the protection of migrants / Janeen Rashmawi
68
4.
roles of the African Union and its Member States in managing migration across the Mediterranean / Martin Welz
94
5.
Strengthening the cooperation between IOM and the EU in the field of migration / Julinda Beqiraj
115
6.
Expanding protection space in Libya and Tunisia after the Arab Spring: reflections on UNHCR's evolving role in mixed migration / Emanuela Paoletti
136
pt. II
Managing regular and irregular migration in the Mediterranean
171
7.
Euro-Mediterranean labour migration: a mutually beneficial PARTNERSHIP? / Anja Wiesbrock
173
8.
Regulating migration and asylum in the Maghreb: what inspirations for an accelerated legal development? / Delphine Perrin
192
9.
EU external border policy: managing irregular migration to Europe / Seline Trevisanut
215
10.
EU and the obligation of non-refoulement at sea / Efthymios Papastavridis
236
11.
Obligation to readmit? The relationship between interstate and EU readmission agreements / Mariagiulia Giuffre
263
12.
cooperative mechanism established by the Migrant Smuggling Protocol to the UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime / Patricia Mallia
288
Index
308