The Syrian Refugee Crisis by Danilo Mandić, Paperback, 9781032056784 | Buy online at The Nile
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The Syrian Refugee Crisis

How Democracies and Autocracies Perpetrated Mass Displacement

Author: Danilo Mandić  

Arguing that Syrian forced migration has been misunderstood and that the politicization of refugees has obfuscated the role of US and European foreign policy, Anatomy of a Refugee Crisis relies on extensive fieldwork data to shed light on forced migration, border restrictionism, and migrant decision-making in the 21st Century.

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Summary

Arguing that Syrian forced migration has been misunderstood and that the politicization of refugees has obfuscated the role of US and European foreign policy, Anatomy of a Refugee Crisis relies on extensive fieldwork data to shed light on forced migration, border restrictionism, and migrant decision-making in the 21st Century.

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Description

The Syrian war, the 21st century’s most protracted and second-deadliest conflict, has driven 5.6 million refugees and 6.6 million internally displaced into flight. As the civil war draws to a close, an autopsy of this historic and unprecedented refugee episode becomes feasible. Why did the war generate so many refugees? How did so many of them get to Europe? Who are these people, and why did they leave? From whom were they fleeing and why? Did European policymakers alleviate or aggravate the refugee crisis?

The Syrian Refugee Crisis argues that Syrian forced migration has been deeply misunderstood. Against conventional wisdom, it suggests that refugees engaged smugglers not just as traffickers or criminal exploiters but as natural allies and means to affirm asylum rights; that the politicization of refugees according to major actors’ foreign policy priorities obfuscated the role of US and European foreign policy in generating massive displacement; and that restrictionist border policies on the Balkan Route were inhumane, incoherent, and counter-productive. Relying on extensive, rare fieldwork data from five countries comprising the Balkan Route (Jordan, Turkey, Greece, Serbia, and Germany), this book sheds light on the understudied, counter-intuitive, and often-misunderstood dynamics of forced migration, refugee agency, border restrictionism, anti-smuggling policy, and migrant decision-making in the 21st century.

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About the Author

Danilo Mandić is Associate Senior Lecturer at the Department of Sociology, Harvard University.

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More on this Book

The Syrian war, the 21st Century's most protracted and second-deadliest conflict, has driven 5.6 million refugees and 6.6 million internally displaced into flight. As the civil war draws to a close, an autopsy of this historic and unprecedented refugee episode becomes feasible. Why did the war generate so many refugees? How did so many of them get to Europe? Who are these people, and why did they leave? Whom were they fleeing and why? Did European policymakers alleviate or aggravate the refugee crisis? Anatomy of a Refugee Crisis argues that Syrian forced migration has been deeply misunderstood. Against conventional wisdom, it suggests that refugees engaged smugglers not just as traffickers or criminal exploiters, but as natural allies and means to affirm asylum rights; that the politicization of refugees according to major actors' foreign policy priorities obfuscated the role of U.S. and European foreign policy in generating massive displacement; and that restrictionist border policies on the Balkan Route were inhumane, incoherent and counter-productive. Relying on extensive, rare fieldwork data from five countries comprising the Balkan Route (Jordan, Turkey, Greece, Serbia and Germany), this book sheds light on the understudied, counter-intuitive and often-misunderstood dynamics of forced migration, refugee agency, border restrictionism, anti-smuggling policy, and migrant decision-making in the 21st Century.

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Product Details

Publisher
Taylor & Francis Ltd | Routledge
Published
21st October 2022
Pages
174
ISBN
9781032056784

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