National Institutions – International Migration. Labour Markets, Welfare States and Immigration Policy
Sammanfattning
All advanced capitalist countries admit entry to some immigrants and refuse entry to others. Despite the fact that
all these countries accept some, but not all, potential immigrants, the variation when it comes to the admission of
foreigners – or immigration policy – is still considerable. Policies and practices range from active invitation or
legal admission to mere tolerance or outright rejection of the people that wish to enter these countries. This study
sheds light on some aspects of this variation in policies and practices by developing and testing an institutional
explanation for immigration admission. A central point of departure for the study is that in order to understand
variation in immigration patterns, we need to pay attention to, and develop different explanations for, different
types of immigration. Building on a comprehensive literature of labour markets and immigration, the study first
suggests that institutional arrangements in the labour market matter for the relative importance of labour
immigration to a country. More specifically, using data over yearly admissions of labour immigrants in a
quantitative analysis, the study shows that labour immigration tend to be more important in economies with
liberal labour market institutions than in more regulated labour markets. Using public opinion data, the study
further shows that perceptions of immigrants tend to differ between labour market contexts. Drawing on theories
from the comparative welfare state literature the study then suggests that generous and universal welfare state
institutions, through their effects on norms and values, will have a positive impact on the intake of forced
immigrants – that is, refugees and asylum seekers. This hypothesis is supported by a quantitative analysis using
data over yearly admissions of forced immigrants. Analyses of public opinion data, official documents and
secondary sources further lend support to the suggested causal mechanism. The overall conclusion is that these
national institutions do matter for immigration policies, although their impact has to some extent weakened over
time.
Examinationsnivå
Doctor of Philosophy
Universitet
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
Institution
Department of Political Science ; Statsvetenskapliga institutionen
Disputation
Fredagen den 18 januari 2013, kl. 13.15, hörsal Dragonen, Sprängkullsgatan 19
Datum för disputation
2013-01-18
Datum
2012-12-13Författare
Boräng, Frida
Nyckelord
Immigration policy
institutions
welfare state
political economy
labour market
Publikationstyp
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-89246-55-3
ISSN
0346-5942
Serie/rapportnr.
Göteborg Studies in Politics
129
Språk
eng