The Global Migration Turn and the New International Order in the Long 1970s

Simone Paoli editor Emmanuel Comte editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Pallas Publications

Publishing:22nd Apr '26

£155.00

This title is due to be published on 22nd April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The Global Migration Turn and the New International Order in the Long 1970s cover

This book reveals how policies, public sentiments, and international negotiations converged to reshape migration governance in the 1970s, a pivotal decade which serves as a crucial starting point for grappling with one of the twenty-first century’s defining issues.

Expansive government interventions, growing public resistance, and the first serious efforts at global migration governance left an enduring legacy. Tracing the shift from relative North–South openness to new restrictions and from East–West closure to cautious openness, the book explores how migration governance transformed in response to economic pressures, decolonisation, and Cold War geopolitics. Covering case studies from Europe, North America, Africa, Asia, and Australia, contributors analyse the emergence of migration as a political flashpoint – from legislative change and international diplomacy to grassroots activism. The book innovates by connecting diverse world regions and actors – state and non-state alike – and by reassessing the role of international organisations such as the ILO, UNHCR, and ICEM.

Essential reading for academics and general readers alike, The Global Migration Turn offers a ground-breaking interpretation of the 1970s as a turning point in global migration governance. It equips readers with critical historical insight into contemporary challenges surrounding migration and international cooperation.

This outstanding book persuasively argues that the 1970s was the defining decade in the history of migration. It dismantles the myth that the "migration stops" of that era ended low-skilled migration, and it shows how the international agreements and organizations that shape migration today emerged from contested interactions between the global North and global South during what the authors call the "long 1970s." This book is a must-read for anyone seeking to understand international migration today.

Randall Hansen, author, War, Work, and Want: How the OPEC Oil Crisis Caused Mass Migration & Revolution

Echoing the broader interest in the long 1970s, this volume shows how important was the decade for the history of migration governance and evolution of the international migration regime. At the intersections the North-South imbalances and the East-West détente, the expansion of the welfare state in the destination countries and efforts to reconcile their interests with those of the sending ones, there emerged tendencies still present today, and dilemmas that remain unsolved. Those seeking to understand contemporary migration-related problems and those interested in the global history of the 1970s will find this volume highly informative.

Dariusz Stola, Polish Academy of Sciences

ISBN: 9789048566334

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

218 pages