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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Moynihan Institute’s Program for the Study of Global Politics w
 elcomes Bethany Lacina from the University of Rochester.Migration is polit
 ically\nconsequential in every region of the world\, in wealthy and poor s
 ocieties\, and\nall forms of political regime. People crossing internation
 al borders can spark\nlocals’ ire. So can migrants relocating within count
 ries. Lacina will present\nthe first chapter of a book manuscript\, "Stran
 gers and Settlers\," which is\nthe first global study of nativism to give 
 a unified account of backlash\nagainst domestic and international migratio
 n. Lacina shows that migration\npolitics takes place within a nativist sta
 tus quo. In this context\, most\nmigrants become politically disadvantaged
  strangers. Nativist mobilization\nagainst stranger migration is often sho
 rt\, ended by political incumbents\nrapidly conceding pro-local measures. 
 Long-lived nativist organizations and\nextended periods of political confl
 ict over migration occur only rarely\, when\npolitical incumbents are unwi
 lling to side with locals against migrants.\nGovernment support for migran
 ts over locals defines settler migration: migrants\norganized or backed by
  a state or drawn from members of a core government\nconstituency.
DTEND:20240126T183000Z
DTSTAMP:20260510T172059Z
DTSTART:20240126T170000Z
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SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Strangers and Settlers: Migration and Conflict in a Nativist World
UID:RFCALITEM639140160590528591
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<div>Moynihan Institute’s Program for the Stud
 y of Global Politics welcomes Bethany Lacina from the University of Roches
 ter.</div><div><br></div><p>Migration is politically\nconsequential in eve
 ry region of the world\, in wealthy and poor societies\, and\nall forms of
  political regime. People crossing international borders can spark\nlocals
 ’ ire. So can migrants relocating within countries. Lacina will present\nt
 he first chapter of a book manuscript\, "Strangers and Settlers\," which i
 s\nthe first global study of nativism to give a unified account of backlas
 h\nagainst domestic and international migration. </p><p>Lacina shows that 
 migration\npolitics takes place within a nativist status quo. In this cont
 ext\, most\nmigrants become politically disadvantaged strangers. Nativist 
 mobilization\nagainst stranger migration is often short\, ended by politic
 al incumbents\nrapidly conceding pro-local measures. Long-lived nativist o
 rganizations and\nextended periods of political conflict over migration oc
 cur only rarely\, when\npolitical incumbents are unwilling to side with lo
 cals against migrants.\nGovernment support for migrants over locals define
 s settler migration: migrants\norganized or backed by a state or drawn fro
 m members of a core government\nconstituency.</p><div></div>
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