Explaining the rise of diaspora institutions
Alan Gamlen (Victoria University Wellington)
Special Lecture
Tuesday, 20 May 2014, 1pm to 2pm
Seminar Room A, Manor Road Building
Hosted by International Migration Institute, Centre for International Studies and COMPAS
About this event
Why do states establish and maintain diaspora engagement institutions? Formal offices of state dedicated to emigrants and their descendants have been largely overlooked in mainstream political studies, perhaps because they fall in the grey area between domestic politics and international relations. Now, diaspora institutions are found in over half of all United Nations member states, yet we have little theory and large-scale comparative evidence to guide our understanding of how and why they emerge. In response, we identify and then investigate empirical support for three theoretically-grounded perspectives on diaspora institution emergence: instrumentally rational states tapping resources of emigrants and their descendants; value-rational states embracing lost members of the nation-state; institutionally-converging states governing diasporas consistent with global norms.
Chair: Robin Cohen
Discussant: Kalypso Nicolaïdis (St Antony’s College, University of Oxford)