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Tuesday, February 19, 2013

International Migration – A Socio-political perspective


International Migration – A Socio-political perspective

 Introduction

Humans have been on the move since homo sapiens became nomadic. First, they walked east to Asia and north to Europe some 65.000 years ago, according to some scientific theory. The reasons for this movement may have been natural preponderances, like natural disasters, search for food, or simply some natural instinct. Thereafter, came the era of mass migrations caused not by the forces of nature but by forces of men, like the Mongol invasions (man’s brutality in a lawless world), the Crusades (man’s fascination with spirituality), Colonialism (man’s lust for power), and finally the labor migration of the industrial revolution (man’s pursuit of materialism). The history of migration is not the theme of this essay. We may safely say, however, that migration changed from being a natural event to an event forced by men, and more recently to a free choice of men. Now we call migration a freedom protected as a human right.
Already in a hundred forty year old dictionary of politics (Dictionnaire Général de la Politique, edited by M. Block, published by O. Lorenz, 1873, p. 833) we see that the modern migration is rightly distinguished from the forced migration of old times.  Modern migration, the beginning of which is dated back to 1815 Vienna Peace Treaty, was described as a freedom and right that was beneficial both to countries of origin and lands to be populated. It was also recognized that migration became a regular fact with the advance in transport and navigation, with political greed or oppression, and with man’s adventurism and discoveries. This means that the current understanding of migration is at least as old as two hundred years.
Is international migration really a freedom and right? Is it the same thing from the perspective of the host society? What are the good and bad consequences of humans’ access to the entire world without any limitation? Was migration called a freedom after political boundaries were drawn? International agreements determined free movement to be a human right.[1] However, when this freedom was enunciated, delimitations of rights accompanying it were not defined appropriately. International rules regarding migrants’ rights remain unresolved.[2]
Lately, an upsurge in international migration rekindled interest in its regulation in host countries because of the social consequences experienced in their societies. This surge is presumably due to the fall of the Berlin Wall and with it the Soviet regime, the ensuing rapid EU enlargement, the US policies to spread freedom and human rights, and the economic and telecommunication boom of 1990s. World Bank records show that there are 215.8 million migrants in the world. That constitutes 3.2% of the world population. Reuters reports that migrants constitute 10 or more percent of the local population in 48 countries.[3] J. Chamie reported that international migrant population had more than doubled from 77 million in 1960 to 178 million in 2000, and he predicts, “International migration is expected to remain high during the 21st century. The more developed regions are expected to continue being net receivers of international migrants, with an average gain of more than 2.5 million per year over the next 40 years.”[4] The UN reports that the annual rate of change of the migrant stock was 1.3% for the period 1990-95, and 1.8% for 2005-10 corresponding to 2.9% of total population in 1990, and 3.1% in 2010[5]. A 2009 Gallup research shows that 16% of the world’s adults expressed the wish to move permanently to another country. In some countries, this rate is much higher[6]. Ten or more percent migrants in the population of 48 countries, and constant increase in migration especially are worrisome figures.
In view of the strong public reaction in host countries to constant increase in migration, and the apparent political failure to deal with it [7], this essay attempts to analyze the most obvious adverse effects of migration, and policies to remedy those effects. I theorize that popular reactions arise from social effects of migration on the host society, because migration policies fail to distinguish between different types of migrants while regulating the rights of migrants. The global and national data on social metrics include labor migrants, refugees, asylum seekers, illegal migrants, and sometimes even naturalized citizens all together. National regulations and media as well as international instruments on human rights combine all types of migrants. Yet, not all migrants’ intention to move, thus their legal status, is the same; nor their rights should be allowed to be the same. Rights should be matched appropriately with types of migrants*, and the related global policies need to be revised.

           Types of migration

           Labor migration (including all named in international instruments under different titles)
             
           The main theme of migration in the scholarly literature is economic, the simple supply and demand theory in the free labor market (the so-called push-pull effect), namely the demand for labor in industrial countries.[8] The consideration of migration as an economic issue started with the European colonialism and industrialism, and today it is big corporations’ widely recognized “business practice”.[9] Hence, migration is considered and studied mostly from the economic point of view, and another variable in business management.[10] As in many other fields, the business community and economists jumped ahead of all others to “manage” migration for their own purposes. More recently, labor migration became part and parcel of globalization policy, which is basically an economic policy.

           Labor migrants are defined in ILO Convention concerning Migration for Employment (Revised 1949) Article 11, “1. For the purpose of this Convention the term migrant for employment means a person who migrates from one country to another with a view to being employed otherwise than on his own account and includes any person regularly admitted as a migrant for employment.” It is a fact that labor migrants move on their own volition, but their reason is not as compelling as for refugees. More importantly, their primary intent is employment, not the move of permanent residence. Residence in the host country is secondary to and dependent on their continued employment. Hence, the move is of temporary nature, at least originally.

Refugees

According to 2003 UN statistics, “About nine per cent of the migrants are refugees”.[11] It may be a fair assumption that a part of the unease towards migrants are due to the large number of refugees (in addition to the explosion in the number of migrant workers) caused by the endless armed conflicts in parts of the world. International politics led by ideology, and arms industry led by greed keep alive armed conflicts; but eggs laid by politics and industry in remote areas hatch disruption in homelands, as if it were the revenge of the dead of those conflicts.
 The definition of refugees in the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees of 1951 is the inability of a person to re-enter the country of nationality for fear of persecution for “race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion”. While the Convention grants refugees equal rights as for nationals in some respects,[12] it recognizes a “treatment as accorded to aliens”, in others.[13] “(D)ebates continue regarding the nature of the protection that refugees should be granted, the role of the international community, and the obligations of receiving countries towards refugees.”[14] It is important to note, in considering the status of refugees, that although the decision to move is theirs there is a compelling reason that inhibits the refugee’s alternatives, unlike in the case of a labor migrant or a regular “immigrant”. Their move is not motivated by intent of change of permanent residence; return to home country is primary. Their relocation is of temporary nature; it is contingent upon the conditions prevailing in the home country.
 Asylum
 The status of asylum seekers is commonly associated with refugee status. Of the 215.8 million migrants quoted by World Bank for 2010, 16.3 million are “refugees and asylum seekers”, 8% of the global total of migrants.[15] The Executive Committee of the UNHCR uses in its deliberations the term asylum together with the term refugees[16].  The UN Declaration on Territorial Asylum of 1967 in its attempt to regulate asylum could not go beyond recognizing territorial asylum as a right, distinct from diplomatic asylum, and that “It shall rest with the State granting asylum to evaluate the grounds for the grant of asylum.”[17] Since then the international community deliberately avoided the consideration of regulating asylum any further.
 One outrageous aspect of asylum is the requirement of persecution found in the refugee and asylum definitions to be only by authorities, i.e. political persecution.[18] Social persecution by the general public or by a segment of it, which is not all that uncommon, is ignored. Public persecutions practiced as cultural beliefs and traditions -e.g. female mutilation in Africa or female discrimination in Saudi Arabia- do not qualify individuals to seek refuge or asylum. Such persecutions are condoned as the exercise of cultural and religious freedom.
These facts regarding asylum seekers are proof that there is no defendable reason to distinguish asylum seekers from refugees. Accordingly, asylum seekers are considered within the category of refugees for the purposes of this essay.

Migration caused by natural events

Natural disasters and environmental conditions are also counted among the causes for migration. Advances in technology, however, increasingly diminish the need to migrate for reasons of natural disasters. This type of migration may be limited to the most underdeveloped parts of the world, and confined to internal migration. When it is of an international scale, it falls within the category of refugees. Therefore, migration for reasons of natural disasters is not considered in this essay as a distinct category.
Migration for other reasons
UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs considers even foreign students as migrants.[19] Study abroad is a good example of the exercise of individual’s free choice of movement without any compelling reasons being present. However, a hard search for studies regarding international standards for rights of migrants who move their home simply for the sake of moving did not produce any result. This essay intends to open a debate to fill that lacunae, and more specifically on the theory that sweeping and casual recognition of social rights for all types of migrants is the cause of social issues created by migration.

 Issues with migration

Anti-immigration sentiments in host countries and efforts to change migration policies show a parallelism with the increase in migration of the last few decades.[20] This parallelism indicates to one thing only: increased migration has an upsetting effect on host societies, and the existing policies are not fit to cope with it.

Race, nationality, language differences

The scholarly literature on international migration issues indicates that race or nationality differences do not generally cause conflicts between hosts and migrants. Inter-marriages between different races or nationalities are quite frequent. The main sources of discordance between social groups are shown to be language or cultural (especially religious) differences, or both.[21]
The language difference may create misunderstandings between the two groups, but not to the extent of animosity that could lead to conflict. The language difference is solvable easier than any other cause of clashes, because the parties have to find a common language to communicate even for asserting the primacy (official language) of their language or for defending it. Learning and teaching a second language for colloquial purposes is also beneficial for both sides. A different language policy appropriate for each type of migrants may be adopted, specifically for the purpose of integration policy.
If the language difference becomes a social barrier and a source of conflict, it is only when a migrant group grows large, refuses to accept the primacy of the host society, and chooses to make the language difference an instrument of assertion of cultural difference.

Cultural (religious) differences

Culture is the reflection of the character, the personality, and the emotions of men. This reflection can be in the active and creative form like art and literature, or the passive and intuitive form like tradition and belief. The former does not cause clashes; conversely, it helps bring people together. The latter element in culture, namely religion, makes people intransigent. The term culture used throughout this essay is in the latter meaning.
A migrant’s baggage invariably includes his/her race, language, nationality, and religion, irrespective of his/her motivation to move; knowledge and skills are included only if he/she has any. Furthermore, the technological advance in the communication and transport industries enabled migrants to maintain uninterrupted close ties with the home country and home culture.[22] There are several studies that confirm the fact that even if a migrant’s all other identifying cultural features may change with the passage of time, his/her religious conviction would not. His/her religiosity may even intensify, if he/she falls in the web of his/her isolated community in search of orientation in the new and unfamiliar environment.[23] While the effects of race, nationality and language differences on host societies may be diminishing, culture has been and continues to be an egregious cause of clashes. The contemporariness of the upsurge in both migration and religiosity suggests that a study on whether there is a parallelism between the two would be a very valuable contribution to the present discourse.
While a discussion here of the effects of religious differences would be too involved and also futile, it will suffice to say that religions, being the main component of cultures and being irreconcilable at the same time, are the main causes of discordance between societies. Religions’ “my way or no way” rigid attitude (monopolistic, more than monotheistic, philosophy) perennially caused adversarial relations between peoples. Historical events, like the Crusades, settlement of Americas by Europeans escaping religious persecution, Jew’s exodus from Europe, caused major migrations, rather than avoid migration. No religion is known to have achieved peace between societies, unlike what they preach.[24] Missionizing is their policy. Some groups’ widely publicized activities (unfortunately also believed by many) under the titles like “interfaith dialogue”, “co-operation between religions”, etc. are no less than a deliberate “wool over the eyes” of the rest for concealing their missionizing activities. No religion achieved equality even among their own adherents; neither at their beginnings nor in the following thousands of years could they accept the equality of women with men. How can they be believable to achieve conciliation, much less cohesion, between culturally different communities?

Demographics and the exercise of collective rights

There are two other reasons why migrant populations pose cultural and social problems for host countries, a proportional increase in the population of migrants of the same cultural background, and granting them rights equal to citizens without taking into account the differences between the special statuses of migrants.
The migrant population increases not only by a constant inflow of migrants but also substantially by streaming migration of family members for reunion[25]. Migration for family reunion is a trickling migration; it is inconspicuous because the arrival of spouses means the arrival of new-borns as well. When the population of a migrant group reaches the “critical mass” it can start putting pressure on the host society. Wives, in addition to accelerating the population increase of migrants, are generally more conservative and more attached to their parental family, thus to their culture. Furthermore, mothers are expected to inculcate their own culture on their children. For all these reasons, female migrants have an additional cultural effect on the host society, other than sheer demographics. This does not mean to say however that the female migrants should be treated differently than the male migrants.
It is not unusual that when the population of migrants from the same cultural or national origin grows they form their own functioning cultural islands, the so-called “ethnic enclaves”. These groups encourage new migration from the same cultural background, also serve as shelters for the new arrivals intimidated by the cultural shock.
Once these groups are formed, they make a point of identifying themselves differently from the host society, beyond enjoying the liberty of practicing their own culture. In doing so, they eventually use their rights to assembly and association. Their activities may develop into objecting migration policies like integration, under the claim that these are methods of assimilation or acculturation. Lines between cultures start to be drawn; dichotomy becomes unavoidable. This separatist, instead of unifying, exercise of rights exacerbates the cultural divide and social discord. First demographic, then the economic and cultural, ultimately the political balance in the host country start tilting, and changing the identity and character of the host country. The utmost migrant society, the USA, is a very good example of this phenomenon. People who know the societal appearance and attitude in the US of 1950s and of 2000s may confirm this observation.
There are even cases where migrants organize to influence the host country’s foreign policy in favor of their country of origin. Some labor exporting countries try to exploit this reality. For example, according to media reports, the Turkish PM, in his official visits to Germany, keeps promoting among the Turkish migrant community a three children policy, as well as pressing the German Government to grant more and more rights to Turkish migrants.[26] His alleged objective is to create eventually a large enough public opinion in Germany that will reverse the German opposition to Turkey’s membership in the EU. Another example is the insidious and furtive strategy of an Islamic group headquartered in the US, called Gulen. This movement financially helps Turkish migrant communities in many countries, under the doctrine of “invading the arteries of the society from within”.[27] Its objective is undoubtedly to increase the population and the economic and political power of a migrant group with certain ideology to become influential in the host country policies. The organization’s motto is “Hizmet” defined as “transnational social movement”. This definition explains openly the objective of the organization. The organization, other than help founding businesses, schools, and mosques also established, at least in the US in 1999, a political arm under the appearance of a think thank, Rumi Forum. Such organizations take advantage of the US’ lobbying system for influencing policies for their furtive ulterior motives.
A large group claiming difference from the main group of society, and empowered with equal rights can certainly be a competitor to the main group, and a potential threat to social cohesion in a democratic country. Whereas in a democracy, understood as self-governance, it is impossible to administer without social cohesion.

Migration as economics

Labor migration is promoted for its beneficial effects on the host country economy. It may not be as claimed. Its adverse social effects may cancel out or outweigh the alleged economic benefits.[28]
Migrant workers’ wages are lower than the host country workers’ are.[29] This is in the nature of labor migration. Although laborers migrate to improve their economic conditions, their economic level remains low compared to their host peers. This inferior condition also extends into their retirement.[30] In other words, they simply exchange their low economic condition in their country of origin with the one in their host country. They become a new lower level economic and social class in the host society.
 It is a historical fact that national economies fluctuate (rather because of the manipulations of the free market than due to natural course of events, I surmise). Economic cycles affect migrant laborers even more than they do indigenous laborers. [31] Since migrants’ wages are low, they do not have an accumulation of wealth to cushion adverse economic impacts, and to ride the storm. If they are entitled to social benefits, they become a drain on the host economy and social morale, both of which already ebbed in an economic downturn. 
Even under the normal circumstances migrants, being at the low wage level, are more likely to benefit from the social assistance programmes. In fact, some migrants’ main consideration for migrating may be the social program benefits in the host country.[32] The bottom line of labor migration is that instead of being a social and economic burden on their country of origin, labor migrants become a social and economic burden on the host country. These economic burdens must cancel out some, if not most, of labor migrants’ contribution to the host country economy. The residual economic benefits may not be significant enough to justify the lasting social upsets.
In view of the above arguments, the economic benefits of labor migration to the host country is questionable, to say the least. Treating migration heavily as an economic phenomenon causes neglect of social facets of migration. The short-term economic benefits of labor migration are allowed to have a long-term adverse effect on the social fabric of the host society. Additional migration caused by family reunions, which do not necessarily add to the labor force, are rather addition to social problems [33]
Labor migration is also promoted as beneficial for home country economies, as such it constitutes part of the globalization policy. Globalization’s purpose is to spread prosperity around the globe. The truth of the claim that the latest upsurge in labor migration is the consequence of globalization policy is undeniable.[34] There is a considerable amount of scholarly reports about the contribution of labor migrants in the development of their countries of origin by way of remittances or by returning the know-how and entrepreneurship.
The amount of migrants’ remittances globally is quite large. World Bank’s data available on its website indicate that “remittances constituted 0.7 % of GDP of home countries in 2010. Remittances to developing countries in 2010 amounted to $440 billion.”[35] Accordingly, labor migration is considered an indirect economic development aid for less developed or developing countries. Although there might certainly be many cases of improvement of economic level of individuals back in migrant’s home country, the same cannot be said for the development of that country as a whole. No correlation has been found between migration and development.[36]
I might add that there is not a study comparing the ratios of contribution of remittances to the development of home countries and the migrants’ contribution to the economy of host countries (increase in tax collection, in production of goods, in consumption, in exports). If such a study were available, it might show that the contribution of migrant workers to the economy of the host country may be much larger than the one made to the economy of the home country. Should this be the case, the claimed effect of closing the economic development gap between the two countries may be disproved.
Furthermore, claims regarding the benefits of remittances seem to overlook the fact that remittances also mean no savings in the host country, hence no reinvestment of funds generated by migrants. Yet, this is the same economy claimed to be enriched by migrant laborers. Instead, in recent years some governments and international organizations have been promoting and organizing diaspora in their countries to assist the economic development of the diaspora’s home countries. The US has official overseas programs for such purposes, like The Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review, and International Diaspora Engagement Alliance of the State Department. The Migration Policy Institute and International Organization for Migration are some of the organizations actively pursuing such policy.[37] This approach is an off-shoot of the advanced countries’ undeclared policy of having migrant workers enrich the host country first, which may in turn help the migrants’ home countries’ if and as they wish.
As to the claim that the transfer of know-how by migrants from the host to the home country is another contribution to the development of the home country[38], would it not be a more effective help if the businesses were taken to the migrants’ home countries, instead of taking their laborers away from them? Because, a migrant receiving business operating in the migrants’ home country would generate jobs in the course of transferring the know-how, and increase the domestic purchasing power, tax collection and export income, all of which otherwise benefit the migrant receiving country. There is no doubt that both labor and professional migration benefit also migrant sending countries, because laborers and professionals otherwise would stay idle in an unproductive country. However, when professionals (as opposed to laborers) migrate from the lower to higher developed countries, it is called brain-drain indicating a loss for the country of origin. When laborers migrate in the same direction, it is not called labor-drain. Yet, where there is no labor, brain alone cannot deliver the goods, and vice versa.
Policies on migration
Modern era administrations’ most common practices for maintaining a balance between the freedom to migrate and the preservation of national cohesion were integration, diversity (multiculturalism, pluralism) and human rights policies. Persistence of cultural conflicts, however, proves these policies to be ineffective. Integration was condemned as a stealthy way of assimilating a guest culture, diversity deepened the domestic cultural divides, and granting the citizens’ rights to all migrants (for parity in human rights) sparked clashes between divisions.
Diversity (including multiculturalism, pluralism)
Diversity policy has been introduced as a remedy for cultural differences.[39] Another expression of the diversity policy is the cultural tolerance. The utmost immigrant country, the U.S, is the most obvious example of preaching tolerance and diversity on the one hand, identifying the migrant groups with hyphenated titles on the other, despite Pres. Roosevelt’s admonition that there are no Italian-Americans, Irish-Americans, there are Americans. As J. Habermas quoted from Goethe,  tolerance is nothing more than condescension.[40] Whereas tolerance is part of civility.[41]
The chance for temporary migrants to lose their culture within the limited time of their stay is minimal, and even if they do lose it, it would occur under their own responsibility. The host country should not be held responsible for the protection of a temporary resident’s culture. Such a protection policy is inconsistent with migrants’ temporary status, thus would serve no purpose.
As regards migrants with permanent residence, active integration programs are appropriate and beneficial in their case, but diversity programs for the preservation of their culture are the reflection of the hypocritical “otherness”, “them and us” and “equal but different” policies. An active policy of diversity with regard to permanent residents defeats the purpose of their integration, and their preparation for citizenship. Integration and diversity cannot go hand-in-hand; they work in opposite directions.
The worst active diversity program is to allow, and even to provide public funds, for schools established and operated by migrant groups to teach their native language. The real objective of these schools is none other than to inculcate and perpetuate migrants’ culture in their future generations. Public support for Gulen Movement charter schools (ironically called Harmony schools) mushrooming all over the US -not to mention all over the world, except being banned in Russia and Netherlands- is the most egregious example of this suicidal policy. Official and formal support with public tax money for an activity that seeds social problems for the coming generations is, to say the least, unconscionable.
In pursuit of multiculturalism and pluralism, the Archbishop of Canterbury went so far as to unsuccessfully suggesting the adoption of Sharia law for the Muslim community in England. In Canada, a limited practice of Sharia in family law within the Muslim community is allowed. Do such measures mean that “honor killing” or “female genital mutilation” or “underage marriage” practiced by some groups are acceptable to a society that claims to live by modern principles of freedom, equality and human rights? Such a dichotomic administration must raise questions about the principle of equality before the law, and about the unitarian philosophy that characterizes “the law of the land”. How far can a democracy go with tolerance? For a discussion of pluralist politics, freedom of religion, and so-called secularism see the present author’s Secularism and the Separation of Church and State in www.sociopoliticalviews.blogspot.com. Habermas' discussion of tolerance in depth, especially where tolerance pertains attacks on principle concepts like democracy or constitution, are illuminating.[42]
Active diversity programs for all types of migrants must be abandoned for their irrationality. [43] Experience shows that diversity policies do not guarantee social cohesion, whereas social cohesion guarantees peace.
Equal rights
While the demographic issues, including family reunion, should not be interfered with, migrants’ rights, not only could, but also should be regulated, if social discontent that leads to anti-immigration sentiments are to be avoided. The most advanced system of governance, democracy, needs social cohesion more than any other type of governance. The power required to govern in a democracy is that of peoples’ (not the ruler’s), but an ingredient is needed between the people and governance for the two to function smoothly. That is the social cohesion. The absence or destruction of social cohesion would render people powerless, and self-governance would be impossible; democracy would be replaced by chaos.
The International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families, 18 December 1990, grants migrant workers the same standing as the host country’s workers. Article 40 allows them to form their own trade unions and associations, and Article 54 entitles them to unemployment benefits. ILO Convention No. 97 on Migration for Employment, (Revised) 1949, provides in its “Article 11.1, “… treatment no less than that which it applies to its own nationals”, including “membership of trade unions and enjoyment of the benefits of collective bargaining; and “unemployment”. In particular, the granting of unemployment benefit to labor migrants is outrageous; because unemployment of the migrant worker means that the employment contract, therefore the original reason for his/her migration has ended. The recognition of his/her unemployment benefits unjustifiably changes his/her temporary status. This indiscriminate extension of rights is the main source of economic and social grievances within the host society, because it unjustly aggravates the employment, thus economic condition of the host country workers.  
Many host countries have been implementing active programs of social assistance and education for the civic integration of migrants for a long time. But, the later years’ violence show that integration policies failed. In the US the “melting pot” concept and practice gave way in late 1960s to a “salad bowl” or “pluralist” theory.[44] Some European countries recently had to admit formally and publicly that their integration policies failed.[45] Even the requirement of relinquishing allegiance to home country and swearing allegiance to the adopted country, for example in France, did not improve integration.[46] Earlier in 2012, there were media reports that some Muslim soldiers of the French Army, which constitutes 13% of the total, refused to fight in Afghanistan against their coreligionists. Three Muslim soldiers in the Austrian army, of which 3.5% are Muslim, refused to salute the Austrian flag because to do so, they claimed, is against their culture. Even disinterest or passivity in civic duties of naturalized citizens can affect the policies of a largely immigrant host society. “In 2008 US elections 46 % of naturalized citizens did not vote, compared to 35.6% of native citizens.”[47]
Integration must be for the adaptation of migrants into the civic system (economic, social and legal) of the host country, not into its cultural system.[48] Civic integration is important as regards migrants with permanent residence status, because social cohesion is necessary to observe in the case of people who migrated with the intent to join the host society. Integration policies should be limited to permanent residents and to civic matters. Cultural integration is an oxymoron. Cultures are not “integratable”. Nationality and religion, two cornerstones of an individual’s culture, are unalterable. Nationality is unalterable because it is a natural, a biological fact. Religion, although man made, is averse to any alteration due to its historical, traditional, emotional threads. Any attempt of cultural integration would be wrong, and would back fire.
Temporary migrants’, like labor migrants, primary concern is the improvement of their personal economic condition or, like refugees and asylum seekers, their personal security. Their original intention and real objective is not civil integration with their host society. They do not associate with the host country’s history, culture or interests. They do not identify themselves with the host population. They do not aim at a long term relation with the host country. Therefore, they are not motivated to partake in local civic and social activities. Civic integration programs for temporary migrants are not only contrary to their status, but also may create the contrary effect.
The policy of not differentiating the legal status and rights of different types of migrants, and in particular granting them rights equal to those of citizens in the name of human rights may appear to be just, but it may be a breach of justice for citizens. It is necessary, in fact imperative, to classify and define appropriately the legal status and rights of different types of migrants. A freedom may be for all, but rights under that freedom are not necessarily fit for all, they may differ.
Another important note of caution is necessary while regulating migration. There is a tendency in the media, and in public or private organizations involved with migration, sometimes to identify migrants as minorities. The term minorities ought to be limited to peoples who constitute part of original inhabitants of the land, society, and history. They are citizens by birth, history and land. Minorities do have citizen’s rights, including collective rights, like forming their own social and cultural institutions. Minorities may even have political autonomy, if agreed with the majority. The status of Catalans and Basques of Spain are examples of such an agreement. Cessation, as in the case of former Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia is also a probability. Any country that would classify migrants as minorities would have to face these probabilities, versus social cohesion.
Labor migration and Globalization
Globalization policy seemed at first as globalization of trade and economic development. Accordingly, it could not have been initiated by lower level societies for lack of necessary knowledge and resources; it was launched by advanced powerful societies. The unfortunate turn of events was, however, the policy of backing an international economic policy with power for it to succeed.[49] Globalization was then associated with colonialism, use of force and imperialism. Globalization became hubris. Globalization led by the advanced Western countries in their own style was the death toll for globalization. One effort to soften this bad image came from Joseph Nye. He introduced the concept of “soft power”, meaning the use of diplomacy and civil institutions for achieving globalization but still in the image of the West.[50] This view, of course, misses the point that globalization cannot succeed if it is still in the image of the West supported by power, may it be a soft one. S. Huntington put it very succinctly when he contrasted the West's understanding of globalization from the "rest".[51] The fact is that the Boxing policy of the 19th century could no longer work, after having seeded the notions of equality, freedom and human rights in not-so-advanced societies.
Furthermore, when political globalization (democracy and human rights) was added to the economic globalization, it became identical with the globalization of the Western culture. S. Huntington was of the opinion that the thought of Western culture being universal was wrong.[52] If the “characteristics of Western society” are as he described them in his book, we need not wonder why. The “Rest” perceived globalization as a Western culture globalization, rather than the claimed globalization of prosperity and democracy. Free movement of capital, labor, and goods became not only more beneficial for the West, but at the same time opened an avenue to change the social fabric and the political system of the migrant sending countries in the Western image.[53] Globalization and labor migration accompanying it aggravated the adverse effects of migration.
Globalization imposed by any foreign power, whether in the Western, Eastern, Northern, or Southern style, potentially kindles the assertion of identity difference by the people at the receiving end of globalization. Foreign powers’ triumphalist, exceptionalist, and condescending policies are not welcome in less developed societies where the pride of own identity is more important than prosperity or democracy. Globalization became, in fact, the enemy of globalization itself. Historian A.J. Basevich wrote in WPost (December 16, 2011), ”Affirming U.S. military primacy was key to upholding American ideological and economic prescriptions. … The beliefs to which the end of the Cold War gave rise – liberal democracy triumphant, globalization as the next big thing and American dominion affirmed by a new way of war – have all come to rest in that unmarked grave reserved for failed ideas.”
Hence, the focus on labor migration as a domestic economic issue and as part of economic globalization policy need to be replaced by a new approach.
Regulating nationally
People view freedoms from their own singular perspective. Yet, the same freedom is also the freedom of others. A person is a person only in relation to other people, so is freedom. The freedom of a single person in the world has no point of reference, no meaning. Hence, individuals need to see freedoms from the perspective of all. That is when the delineation, delimitation, and regulation of freedom become necessary. A freedom can be defined and regulated by defining and regulating the rights that come with that freedom. Freedom of movement is one thing, rights arising from the exercise of this freedom, is another. In the context of this essay, it is not the regulation of freedom of movement per se, but the regulation of rights accompanying it is in question. The reality is that the current policies of recognition of all rights for all types of migrants is not legally, socially, practically, and morally justifiable.
 The single-source approach, like economics or demographics, to an important socio-economic-political subject like international migration, is not conducive to an accurate understanding of an already complex subject.[54] Data, analysis, discussion, and regulation of rights and policies become fruitless in a field where there is confusion even in the definition of different types of migrants.
The present essay intends to shift the emphasis from the freedom of movement and economic benefits thereof, as has been done thus far, to social issues and to rights appropriate to the status of each category of migrants. The suggestion here is the regulation of rights has to be designed specific to different types of migrants if social cohesion in the host country has priority over economic and cultural considerations.
Rights specific to types of migrants
The important and fundamental distinction between the dependence and independence of the decision to move, and between the consequential temporary residence and intentional permanent residence should be the determining factors in the respective rights. In order to emphasize this distinction, the terms “immigrant” and “immigration” in this essay are reserved for migrants who independently decide to migrate with the intent of relocating their permanent residence. Migrants who enter the host country under an employment arrangement and consequentially take up temporary residence are called “temmigrants” (from the word temporary).
The points of reference for determining the civic/social status of migrants may range from the status of illegal migrants to that of citizens. Illegal migrants will be illegal, as long as countries recognize boundaries, passports and visa practices, and migrants circumvent those requirements. Illegality defines their status; they are not migrants. No rights should be in question for them. At the other end of the spectrum, there are citizens. Birth right and acquired right are not the same thing. Indigenous citizens are people who did not exercise their freedom to migrate. Migrants are those who chose to exercise that freedom. Indigenous people have historical, traditional and emotional attachments to their land and their society. Migrants do not. Migrants should not be equated to citizens. These fundamental distinctions are borne in mind in defining the rights of different types of migrants, here below.
Within the extremes of that spectrum, aliens are fleetingly present in a host country for a very limited period. Their purpose may be visiting, or attending an event determined in time, like a professional or business event, or education. They do not have the intention of taking up residence, temporary or permanent. Hence, like tourists, they do not even qualify to be migrants.
This leaves us with two types of migrants to regulate, labor migrants and refugees with temporary status, and migrants who relocate with the intent of establishing permanent residence. Refugees (including asylum seekers) migrate under duress and qualify for refugee status so long as duress does; they do not show an independent and deliberate intent to change residence permanently; their residency status is automatically discontinued once the circumstances of persecution in the country of nationality cease to exist.[55] Refugees, including asylum seekers, have the status of temporary migrants. They are not “immigrants”. However, in the event of extended stay, for example more than two years, they may be given the option of changing their status to that of “immigrant”.
Labor migrants for the purpose of this essay are workers recruited by host country businesses from abroad or from among refugees. Labor migrants’ intent is to improve their own economic condition, it is not to call the host country home. Even the generous 1990 Convention on the Rights of All Migrant Workers recognizes, right at the outset in its Article 1, the temporary status of laborers.  They take up residence in the host country as a consequence of their employment. They maintain close ties with the country of origin and the intent to return, during their entire period of residence. Their residency status is tied to the term of their employment contract.
On the other hand, real “immigrants” initiate their own move, independently from any “push/pull” factor. They take that decision for whatever dissatisfaction they may have in their home country or whatever attraction they may find in the host country. They migrate as a result of an educated and well planned personal decision taken independently from any compelling circumstance, with the intent of establishing permanent residence in the host country, and ultimately of citizenship. This is effectively the change of home country.
These differences in the nature and scope of “temmigrants” and “immigrants” justify the recognition of different rights appropriate for each.
The rights of “temmigrants” should include access to social, health and education services of the host country, but at the full responsibility and cost of the employer of the labor migrant, who caused their migration as part of his/her business decision. Employers must bear responsibility for all the consequences of importing foreign labor, including insurance for their health and safety. They are in no different position than an importer of goods, who is held responsible for the safety and quality of goods he imports. “Temmigrants” should not be subject to any public integration or diversity programs for reasons explained above. They should not be a financial burden on public funds in any shape or form. But, most importantly, “temmigrants” should not have the right to assembly and association as this right, in particular, easily crosses over to collective rights, causing the confusion with the legal status of other migrants and citizens. Although UN Declaration on Human Rights in its Article 20 includes the freedom of assembly and association, the Declaration was adopted for the delineation of individual rights, not collective rights. In other words, “temmigrants” may exercise this right by joining an association existing in the host country, but may not form an association for their own objectives. And, while The Convention on the Rights of All Migrant Workers of 1990 specifies this point clearly in Article 26.1(a), “the right of migrant workers and members of their families to take part in meetings and activities of trade unions and of any other associations”, it extends this right for documented workers to “form associations and trade unions in the State of employment for the protection of their economic, social, cultural and other interests”, in its Article 40. A course correction would be very appropriate in this respect.
In the case of migrants who acquire permanent residence, “immigrants”, the same social assistance responsibilities rest with the government. “Immigrants” should be entitled to all the active civic and social integration programs in preparation for their potential citizenship. Diversity programs, on the other hand, should be abolished, for their opposite effects as explained above. “Immigrants” should have all the rights and responsibilities of citizens, including the responsibility to preserve the social unity of the host society. They immigrate to join a society knowingly different from their own, not with the intention of disrupting that society. If their original intent were in fact to upset the established ways of the host society, their migration would be an incursion, a stealthy invasion, not “immigration”. “Immigrants”, like citizens, while exercising their right to assembly and association, should not be allowed to be active in anything disruptive of social unity, cohesion, interests and peace of the host society. In the event of “immigrants” economic, political, or cultural activity that may be found disruptive of social unity, their permanent residency status may be revoked, as a civil judicial action, not as a criminal action. Their status would change to undesirable alien status. The revocability of their “immigrant” status may be the only difference from citizens, who are subject to criminal prosecution for the same offenses.
It may be argued that since citizens, on occasion, also resort to such undesirable activities, “immigrants” should not be subject to different treatment than citizens. We need to recall at this point the difference between the types of social contracts of citizens with the Constitution, and that of “immigrants”. The social contract of citizens is established naturally by birth, as a birthright without a conscientious choice; on the other hand, the social contract of “immigrants” is a matter of their conscientious choice. In other words, while the contract for the former is an opt-out type, it is opt-in type for the latter.
The recognition of family reunion for migrants is natural, it is human, although some politicians think otherwise.[56] The late arrivals of the family should fall in the same status as the migrant’s, they should enjoy the same rights. Families of “temmigrants” and refugees would have temporary status, those of “immigrants” would enjoy permanent resident status.
Regulating issues arising from cultural differences
There is not much to be done to overcome this obstacle to social cohesion. Although the reintroduction of a strong humanistic education along the science education may help strengthen the power of reasoning and reduce somewhat the effect of religions, the education methods of the last five hundred years do not give us hope for the near future. The earlier humanistic education gradually disappeared instead of developing hand in hand with the science education.[57] The disappearance of humanistic education and the synchronic upsurge of ethereal religiosity prove that beliefs and traditions are much more strongly imbedded in humans than reasoning and intellect do. There is no point therefore in theorizing about regulations that may help avoid effects of cultural differences. The only reasonable and practical, and may be possible, position to be taken in this respect may be to exclude all religion and religious consideration from any policy decision on migration. This course would be in perfect conformity with the principle of separation of Church and state in politics.
Regulating internationally
International migration cannot be regulated solely by actions of individual states. Being an international phenomenon, it must be addressed also internationally. Yet, the international community never adopted general principles for migrants’ conditions other than recognizing migration as freedom of movement in 1948 UN Declaration on Human Rights, and in 1976 Covenant of Civil and Political Rights. More specifically, labor migration and refugee migration were regulated in the 1949 ILO Convention on Migration for Employment (Revised), and the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, respectively. A Global Forum on Migration and Development (GFMD) was established as late as in 2007 as a voluntary, non-binding and informal consultative body to study,[58] once again, ways to improve migration for economic development, like to “Engage diaspora organisations in development planning, or Support the capacity of diaspora organisations and institutions working for development, Encourage measures to promote the exercise of political rights and political participation, Consider issuing diaspora bonds to tap diaspora wealth for Development”. This last action by the international community demonstrates that it is satisfied with looking at migration only as an economic and refugee question. The international community seems to insist on finding ways to further strengthen the current  policies despite the fact that host countries experience difficulty in balancing their social cohesion with their international commitments to human rights and freedoms. No efforts are made for finding new ways to address the social issues created by the upsurge of international migration.[59]
It may be useful to look briefly into the current concept of internationalism. Internationalism that emerged at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century was intergovernmental, and was formed basically to suppress nationalism seen as the cause of international conflicts and a threat to states. Conflicts, of course, have many other causes, and nationalism has many variations. This kind of internationalism conceived for bridling nationalism could not eliminate conflicts.  Nationalism survived, conflicts continued. “Nationalism is a natural and historical fact arising from the social need for solidarity. Nationalism gave life to many countries in the world, and it continues to do so in many countries under more politically correct names, like patriotism, national interests, etc. Nationalism is the natural binding element in a society, if removed it has to be replaced by some kind of social binding element.”[60] Many political ideologies developed thereafter, e.g. communism, capitalism, democracy and human rights, could not help social cohesion either. The political vacuum was once again recently filled in with the other element dearest to the heart of men, religion, which is also proven historically not being conducive to social cohesion.
Nevertheless, internationalism developed after WWII, while still suppressing nationalism, established some intergovernmental and regional institutions to provide fora to debate and find some minimum common denominators in specialized areas. These Specialized Agencies are good for developing international standards in fields of intense human interaction, although at times they are bogged down with indefensible and trivial national traditions or power play between great powers.[61] They could achieve their objectives in a more professional manner, if they could be led more by professional associations and specialists than by governmental politics. On the other hand, the UN itself and some organizations within the UN constellation are inter-governmental political bodies appropriately reserved for dealing with political issues, like security, disarmament, and legal matters (e.g. Law of the Sea, Int. Court of Justice). Neither the specialized agencies nor political institutions, however, are designed to work on universal social matters, except to provide the fertile environment for them.
The two important social matters, human rights and status of women, were deliberated by a political body, the UN. International actions with governmental involvement unavoidably become politicized. This fact created the perception that human rights are political leverages in the hands of great powers, and matters concerning women’s status did not go yet anywhere. International migration deserves to be debated as a social matter, on its own merit, not as a side issue of economics or globalization. It also needs to be debated in a non-governmental, non-interest-group, apolitical and acultural universal forum. “We need a humanist moral system to replace the system of life after life that makes no sense. As people globally live closer than ever before, social institutions that divide rather than unite, like nationalism and religions, will be obsolete. Differences must be complementary instead of divisive.”[62] We need not my way or your way to settle the social issues, but a third neutral way, an elevated common way designed by reason, not by traditions, beliefs and emotions.
Conclusion
Admittedly, changing the focus from the economic causes and effects of international migration to its social causes and effects will be very difficult. Cleansing the migration policies of the falsehood of diversity, revising rights appropriate for each migrant category, and regulating international migration as a social issue on its own merit in an apolitical forum, not within the economic globalization, will fall on deaf ears of businesses, politicians and religious establishments. However, if men were ingenious enough to have created cultures and religions that divide them, they must be creative enough to define universal principles and standards on important social matters like migration that may unify them. The enunciation of human rights in 1948 was one such creativeness in universal social matters, but the only one in modern times. Where there are no ideas, visions, and goals for the future, the future will continue to be dominated by the past, namely by traditions and superstitions, as it is happening in the current stage of civilization. [63]
January 2013
*Migration within the same country (from rural to urban areas) also has political, economic, or occasionally environmental reasons - such as natural disasters-, and has cultural effects; however, this essay is limited to views on international migration. The term migrant is used generically in order to emphasize distinctions in terms; the terms “immigrant” and “immigration” are deliberately reserved for persons who migrate with a deliberate individual free choice, without exigencies, and with the intent to change permanent residence from one country to another.


Notes



[1] Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948, Article 13 (2), “Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country.”
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, 1966, Article 12, “2. Everyone shall be free to leave any country, including his own. 3. The above-mentioned rights shall not be subject to any restrictions except those which are provided by law, are necessary to protect national security, public order (ordre public), public health or morals or the rights and freedoms of others, and are consistent with the other rights recognized in the present Covenant.”

The UN Human Rights Committee, General Comment No. 27 (67), 18 Oct. 1999, Regarding Article 12 of Human Right, “12.1. Liberty of movement is an indispensable condition for the free development of a person …”
[2] Antoine Pécoud and Paul de Guchteneire, Migration Without Borders,  UNESCO, 2007
 “There are various categories of rights that are now enshrined, to varying degrees, in laws, international conventions and agreements. Rights of relevance to migrants, both forced and voluntary, include civil and political rights, access to justice and redress to courts, the right of association and assembly, the right to work, education and health, freedom from arbitrary detention, and the right to return. However, despite increasing acceptance of the notion that migrants either do have, or should have, rights, access to rights remains highly varied. Most obviously, the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of their Families adopted by the UN General Assembly in 1990 is still only ratified by 33 states worldwide, almost all of them primarily sending countries of migrant workers 

[3] Council of Europe, Compendium of Cultural Policies and Trends in Europe, 12th Edition 2011, reports that twelve of those are in Europe alone. See also Eurostat Issue number 34/2011, “6.5% of the EU population are foreigners and 9.4% are born abroad”.

[4] Joseph Chamie, Demography, Migration and Population Policies, Globalization and Migration Panel, International Social Science Council, 10-12 May 2009.

[5] UN DESA Population Division (2009), The Trends in International Migrant Stock: The 2008 Revision, UN database POP/DB/MIG/Stock/Rev. 2008.

[6] P. Fargues, International Migration and the Demographic Transition: A Two-Way Interaction, International Migration Review Vol. 45 Number 3 (Fall 2011) pp. 588-614, footnote 13 

[7] International Organization for Migration, World Migration Report, p.20. “According to the Pew Survey, only in Canada does a strong majority of the population (77%) have a positive view of immigrants. Among other major industrialized countries, there is greatest support for immigrants in the United
States of America (49%). Nevertheless, a large minority (43%) believes immigrants are bad for
the country. Immigrants are particularly unpopular across Europe. In every European country
except Bulgaria, immigrants are seen as having a bad influence on the country. In Western
Europe, strong negative sentiments towards immigrants were registered in Germany and Italy
(60% and 67%, respectively). Negative sentiment is even higher in Eastern Europe, where
strong majorities in the Czech Republic (79%) and Slovak Republic (69%) take a dim view of
immigration, as do the majority of Russians (59%).

[8] Douglas Massey et.al. Theories of International Migration: A Review and Appraisal
Population and Development Review, Vol. 19, No. 3 (Sep., 1993), pp. 431-466

[9] Massey, idem
[10] Alex Balch, Managing Labour Migration in Europe: ideas knowledge and policy change, University of Sheffield, Working Paper 184, January 2010

[11]UN International Migration Report 2002, International Migration : A Global Issue for the 21st Century, POP/849, 6 February 2003.
[12] Convention relating to the Status of Refugees, 28 July 1951. Articles 1 A (1), 1 C (5), 4, 14, 16.2, 17.3, 20, 22.1, 23, 24.1.

[13] Idem.. Articles 7, 17.1, 18, 19, 21, 22.2, 26
            
[14] Elisa MasonGuide to International Refugee Law Resources on the Web, March 5, 2009, http://www.llrx.com/features/refugee.htm

[15] World Bank, Migration & Remittances Factbook 2011, Second edition.

[16] Elisa Mason, supra.

[17] Declaration on Territorial Asylum, adopted by the General Assembly under resolution 2312 (XXII) of 14 December 1967.

[18] UN Declaration of Human Rights, Article 14.

[19] United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division, International Migration in a Globalizing World: The Role of Youth, Technical Paper  No. 2011/1, “Responding to the forces of globalization, increasing numbers of young people are migrating in order to study abroad.”
UN International Migration Report of 2002 also reports “In 2001, almost a quarter of all countries viewed immigration levels as too high; 44 per cent of developed countries had policies aiming to lower immigration levels, as did 39 per cent of developing countries.”

[20] IpsosGlobal@dvisory, “A survey conducted by global research company Ipsos finds that nearly one half (45%) of global citizens believe ‘immigration has generally had a negative impact on their country’ compared to just one in five (21%) who believe the impact has been positive; all others (29%) are on the fence. Against a backdrop where eight in ten (80%) global citizens in the 23 countries polled believe that over the last five years the amount of migrants in their country has increased, half (52%) of all respondents also believe there are too many immigrants in their country, have made it more difficult for their country’s people get jobs (48%) and place too much pressure on their country’s public services (51%).”

[21] C. Joppke in The Role of the State in Cultural Integration, Migration Policy Institute, February 2012, finds that the main cultural differences that impede integration are the language and religion.

[22] P. Fargue, supra, p.595

[23] Saba Senses Ozyurt, Living Islam in Non-Muslim Spaces: How Religiosity of Muslim Immigrant Women Affect Their Cultural and Civic Integration in Western Host Societies, Working Paper 179, June 2009, CCIS,  

[24] For a good discussion of this subject see Peter O’Brien, Islamic Civilization and (Western) Modernity, Comparative Civilizations Review Number 65, Fall 2011.

[25] UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division, International Migration in a  Globalizing World: The Role of Youth, Technical Paper  No. 2011/1,  “In most countries, the spouses of citizens are allowed to immigrate and are granted the right to residence. Spouses constitute a sizable proportion of the migrants admitted by major receiving countries. In 2003, 45 per cent of all long-term immigrants to France were spouses reuniting from abroad. In the United States, spouses of U.S. citizens accounted for 28 per cent of all persons granted permanent resident status in 2009. In Australia and Canada, the spouses of citizens or permanent residents accounted for 22 per cent and 20 per cent, respectively, of all immigrants admitted in 2003. In Italy and Sweden, at least 40 per cent of all immigrants were spouses reuniting with residents in those countries in 2003.”

[26] During a visit to Germany two years ago, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan angered many with statements made in a speech given to the Turkish community in Cologne in which he warned against assimilation in Germany. He called assimilation a "crime against humanity."

[27]    Turkey’s Turning Point, Michael Rubin, National Review Online, April 14, 2008; Gulen Movement: Turkey’s Third Power, jiaa.janes.com, February 2009; The Fethullah Gulen Movement, Bill Park, MERIA, January 5, 2009; Fethullah Gulen’s Grand Ambition, R. Sharon-Krespin, MEQ, Winter 2009; The Gulen Movement: A New Islamic World Order?, AIRA, July 1, 2011; Inspiring or insidious, Delphine Strauss, Financial Times, April 29, 2011.

[28] Douglas S. Massey et.al. supra. 

[29] Pia M. Orrenius, Madeline Zavodny, Tied to the Business Cycle: How Immigrants Fare in Good and Bad Economic Times, November 2009, Migration Policy Institute, P.14; 
       Douglas S. Massey et al., supra

[30] Derek Hum and Wayne Simpson, Immigrant Retirement Prospects: From Bad to Worse?
Department of Economics, University of Manitoba, Working Paper 183, January 2009

[31] Orrenius and Zavodny, supra p.25

[32] Derek Hum and Wayne Simpson, supra

[33] Saskia Bonjour, The Power and Morals of Policy Makers:Reassessing the Control Gap, International Migration Review, Spring 2011

[34] Douglas S. Massey et. al., supra

[35] Some developed countries are as much the recipients of remittances as they are senders. In 2009, Germany sent $15.9 billion while she received $11.6 billion. Spain’s respective figures were $12.6 and $10.2 billion. World Bank Factbook 2011.

[36] For a good analysis of this subject see A. Terrazas, Migration and Development: Policy Perspectives from the US, Migration Policy Institute, June 2011, p. 11
[37]  See D.R. Agunias, et.al. “Closing the Distance: How governments strengthen ties with Diaspora”, MPI Report, 2012, and K. Newland, et. al. “ Diasporas: New Partners in Global Development Policy”, MPI 2010.

[38] For a discussion of interrelations between migrants and their home country, see P. Fargues, supra.

[39] For a defense of multiculturalism see Kymlicka.

[40] J. Habermas, Between Naturalism and Religion Polity 2008, p. 253

[41] Idem, p. 260

[42] Idem, pp. 255, 260, 270.

[43]  Zana Vathi, Migration and Settlement of Albanian-Origin Immigrants in London, Sussex Centre for Migration Research, Working Paper No 57

[44]T.R. Jimenez, Immigrants in the United States, Migration Policy Institute, p.2

   See also A. Bisin and T. Verdier,  Beyond the Melting Pot: Cultural Transmission, Marriage, and the Evolution of Ethnic and Religious Traits, The Quarterly Journal Of Economics, August 2000, p. 955.

[45] Der Spiegel 18 October 2010, The World from Berlin, Merkel's Rhetoric in Integration Debate is 'Inexcusable', “In an unusually pointed interjection, German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Sunday declared that multiculturalism in Germany was a failure and said it was an illusion to think that Germans and foreign workers could "live happily side by side."
"We kidded ourselves for a while that they wouldn't stay, but that's not the reality," she told members of the youth group of her Christian Democratic Union party, referring to the influx of workers, known as guest workers, who helped fuel the country's postwar economic boom.”
"Of course the tendency had been to say, 'let's adopt the multicultural concept and live happily side by side, and be happy to be living with each other'. But this concept has failed, and failed utterly," she said.
Her comments fanned Germany's already raging debate on immigration. A chorus of politicians has argued that many people from the immigrant community, which includes some four million Muslims and makes up some 18 percent of the population, have failed to integrate into German society. Thilo Sarrazin touched off the debate in August with the launch of his polemic book blaming immigration for what he saw as the demise of German society.”

      The Guardian 4 February 2011, David Cameron tells Muslim Britain: stop tolerating extremists,

“In a major speech to a security conference in Munich, he will demand: "We need a lot less of the passive tolerance of recent years and much more active, muscular liberalism." Cameron will argue many young men have been drawn to extremism due to a rootlessness created by the weakening of a clear collective British cultural identity. He will say: "Under the doctrine of state multiculturalism we have encouraged different cultures to live separate lives, apart from each other and the mainstream. We have failed to provide a vision of society to which they feel they want to belong. We have even tolerated these segregated communities behaving in ways that run counter to our values. So when a white person holds objectionable views – racism, for example – we rightly condemn them. But when equally unacceptable views or practices have come from someone who isn't white, we've been too cautious, frankly even fearful, to stand up to them."

[46] Will Kymlicka, Multiculturalsim: Succes, failure, and the Future, Migration Policy Institute, February 2012, p.18

See also Yasemin Soysal’s The Limits of Citizenship: Migrants and Postnational Membership in Europe, 1994.

[47] T.R. Jimenez, supra, Chart on p. 13.

[48] See C. Joppke for a discussion on integration.

    Susan Gordon Integrating Immigrants: Morality and Loyalty in U.S. Naturalization Practice, The Center for Comparative Immigration Studies, Working Paper 160, January 2008
[49] S. Huntington, The Clash of Civilizations, Touchstone 1997, p. 310
 See also F. Fukuyama, State Building, Profile Books 2005, pp.131-134

[50] Joseph Nye, Soft Power, Public Affairs 2004.

[51] S. Huntington, supra, p. 184

[52] S. Huntington, supra, p. 310

[53] Douglas S. Massey et.al., supra

[54] Douglas S. Massey et al., supra

[55] Refugee Convention of 1951, Article 1.C (5)

[56] S. Bonjour, supra

[57] See an excellent study by Anthony Kronman, Education’s End, Yale University Press, 2007.

[58] J. Chamie, supra

[59] S. Huntington supra, p. 199

[60] The present author, Nationalism a la Turca”, www.sociopoliticalviews.blogspot.com, November 2012.

[61] For a history and failure of international organizations see a recent publication by Mark Mazower, Governing the World, Penguin Press, 2012.

[62] Leslie Lipson, Moral Decadence of Civilization, 1998.

[63] The present author, “Illusion of Self-governance“, Blog supra, February 2010, “After having realized self-consciousness and self-worth more than four hundred years ago, men should finally be able to identify themselves more and more with their community and human kind as a whole, instead with state, nation, religion, or groups as they did thus far. They can do this only by thinking outside the envelope: to stand at the edge of the frontier of knowledge and think beyond, and most importantly to have the courage to put in practice new ideas that run against but arising from traditions.”