<p><i>Weapons of Mass Migration</i> simply altered the way I viewed the flow of peoples. Countries with lower standards of behavior can use the threat of forcing their people to leave, which would send a flow of unwanted migrants/refugees to democracies that would then have to deal with them. It is very much an asymmetric approach for weaker authoritarian regimes to mess with advanced democracies. Is this policy relevant? You betcha, as democracies such as the United States have to figure out how to react to these kinds of threats. It certainly pressured France and Italy in different ways when Qaddafi was threatening to send refugees to Europe.</p>
- Stephen M. Saideman, Foreign Policy
<p>A new, authoritative look at forced displacement, skillfully linking politics to migrations. This combination moves beyond migration as a single focused topic and connects it to choices within foreign policy. Any student of demography, conflict, and politics will be well served by this exploration of the interaction between government control, migration, and the willingness of populations to move.</p>
Political Science Quarterly
<p>An innovative and beautifully written analysis of how, and to what extent, refugee flows are exploited by states in order to affect policy options taken and decisions made by their counterparts.</p>
Journal of Refugee Studies
<p>Greenhill explains the use of state-engineered migration as a tool of coercive statecraft in the post–World War II era. She rightly points out that this rather insidious means of political suasion has been used numerous times over the relatively short period examined, and with a striking degree of success. <i>Weapons of Mass Migration</i> is innovative, well written, rigorously researched, and timely. It is both theoretically innovative and policy relevant, and will likely spur several new paths for IR research and migration studies.</p>
Perspectives on Politics
<p>IR theorists, foreign policy analysts and migration, security studies, and human rights scholars will all find this book a valuable addition to their scholarship.</p>
Political Studies Review
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Kelly M. Greenhill is Associate Professor of Political Science and International Relations at Tufts University and Visiting Associate Profssor and Senior REsearch Scholar at MIT. She is coeditor of Sex, Drugs, and Body Counts, and of The Use of Force, 8th edition.