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Explaining the immigration policy mix: Countries' relative openness to asylum and labour migration
Authors:CAROLINE SCHULTZ  PHILIPP LUTZ  STEPHAN SIMON
Affiliation:1. Faculty for Social Sciences, Economic and Business Administration, University of Bamberg, Germany;2. Department of Political Science and International Relations, University of Geneva, Switzerland;3. Bamberg Graduate School of Social Sciences, University of Bamberg, Germany
Abstract:Western democracies have developed complex policies to manage migration flows. Much of the scholarly literature and political discourse assume that countries have become increasingly selective and that they prioritise economic intakes. Despite clear efforts by policymakers to distinguish between refugees and migrant workers, we know surprisingly little about how countries combine different policy dimensions and which factors shape their relative openness to different target groups. In this article, we shed light on how countries combine two of the main admission channels, asylum and labour migration, by introducing the concept of the ‘immigration policy mix’. A comparative analysis of 33 OECD countries between 1980 and 2010 examines the pattern and drivers behind their immigration policy mix: Does the policy mix follow a pattern of convergence, is it subject to political dynamics or is it path dependent? The results reveal that despite a shift in political sympathies from asylum to labour migration, countries' immigration policy mixes have strongly converged into more liberal policies overall. The immigration policy mix primarily reflects governments’ limited room to manoeuvre due to competing political pressures. These insights demonstrate that the immigration policy mix serves to enhance our understanding of countries’ complex regulation of immigration.
Keywords:immigration  migration policy  policy mix  labour  asylum
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