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States Against Migrants Deportation In Germany And The United States 1st Edition Antje Ellermann

  • SKU: BELL-1974174
States Against Migrants Deportation In Germany And The United States 1st Edition Antje Ellermann
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States Against Migrants Deportation In Germany And The United States 1st Edition Antje Ellermann instant download after payment.

Publisher: Cambridge University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.34 MB
Pages: 214
Author: Antje Ellermann
ISBN: 9780511650253, 9780521092906, 9780521515689, 0511650256, 0521092906, 0521515688
Language: English
Year: 2009
Edition: 1

Product desciption

States Against Migrants Deportation In Germany And The United States 1st Edition Antje Ellermann by Antje Ellermann 9780511650253, 9780521092906, 9780521515689, 0511650256, 0521092906, 0521515688 instant download after payment.

In this comparative study of the contemporary politics of deportation in Germany and the United States, Antje Ellermann analyzes the capacity of the liberal democratic state to control individuals within its borders. The book grapples with the question of why, in the 1990s, Germany responded to vociferous public demands for stricter immigration control by passing and implementing far-reaching policy reforms, while the United States failed to effectively respond to a comparable public mandate. Drawing on extensive field interviews, Ellermann finds that these crossnational differences reflect institutionally determined variations in socially coercive state capacity. By tracing the politics of deportation across the evolution of the policy cycle, beginning with anti-immigrant populist backlash and ending in the expulsion of migrants by deportation bureaucrats, Ellermann is also able to show that the conditions underlying state capacity systematically vary across policy stages. Whereas the ability to make socially coercive law is contingent on strong institutional linkages between the public and legislators, the capacity for implementation depends on the political insulation of bureaucrats.

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