Migration governance evolution amidst a nested crisis: The case of South America
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International Migration (e-ISSN: 1468-2435)
Abstract
This article aims to expand our understanding of how
diverse crises affect the evolution of migration governance.
Building upon an interdisciplinary framework, it proposes a
nuanced notion of migration crisis, qualified as ‘nested’, and
illustrates its application through an interpretative synthesis
of empirical works and primary sources on responses to
the massive emigration of Venezuelans to South American
countries at the peak of the outflow (2017–2019). This
conceptual and analytical exercise highlights the interplay
of national and regional dynamics and fills some gaps in
existing accounts regarding what governability entails, and
the nature, scope, and reasons of governance evolution. It
shows that policy choices were embedded in and shaped
by several critical structural conditions and junctures; disagreement
on problem definition precluded cooperation and
redefined both the role of key actors and the construction of
the crisis narrative; apparent contradictions between rhetoric
and practice were rather a re-framing of complementary
(humanitarian/securitization) interventions.
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Keywords
Migración, Migration, Migration Policy, Migration Governance, International migration