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Palgrave Macmillan

Contesting Migration Crises in Central Eastern Europe

A Political Economy Approach to Poland’s Responses Towards Refugee Protection Provision

  • Book
  • © 2023

Overview

  • Offers a major contribution to better understanding states’ rationale for contesting future migration crises
  • Proposes a new method for assessing the variables in the security-humanitarian relationship
  • Shows how the perception of costs of providing refugee protection differ depending on the state’s identity

Part of the book series: Mobility & Politics (MPP)

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Table of contents (9 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

During the 2015 and 2016 refugee crisis the EU called on the Member States to engage in protection burden-sharing. This proposal found strong opposition from some of the Visegrad Group countries, including Poland, which expressed their reluctance to the relocation scheme securitizing the political narrative towards refugees. On the contrary, in 2022, during the Russian military aggression against Ukraine, Poland strengthened an “open door policy”, showing a humanitarian approach towards Ukrainian refugees.

This book uses a public goods theoretical framework to examine the various public goods characteristics of refugee protection in such scenarios. It is argued that the publicness and character of refugee protection is socially shaped by norms and identities. States perceive refugee protection, including benefits and costs, in different ways. The author focuses his analysis on the security/humanitarian dichotomy in states’ perceptions of refugees to investigate the accompanying vision of the inherent costs and benefits. The conceptual part of the book provides conclusive support of an alternative constructivist mode in public goods theory for understanding refugee protection burden-sharing.

Authors and Affiliations

  • Centre of Migration Research (University of Warsaw), Warsaw, Poland

    Diego Caballero-Vélez

About the author

​Diego Caballero Vélez is a postdoctoral researcher in the Centre of Migration Research at the University of Warsaw. His research interests include international migration governance, political economy, European integration, EU foreign policy and mixed-methods.

Bibliographic Information

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