TY - JOUR
T1 - Forced migration magnitude and violence in international crises
T2 - 1945-2015
AU - Ben-Yehuda, Hemda
AU - Goldstein, Rami
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Author(s).
PY - 2020/6/1
Y1 - 2020/6/1
N2 - This study focuses on forced migration and interstate violence during international crises, as amajor security concernwith salientimplications forinternational relations stability. The empirical data consists of 229 crises designated as Forced Migration Crises (FMC), identified within the 374 crises of the International Crisis Behavior (ICB) project. The study outlines a framework for analyzing FMC compared with Non-Forced Migration Crises (NFMC), presents an index of Forced Migration Magnitude (FMM), and probes three hypotheses. It points to transformations in forced migration since WWII, compares crises with and without forced migration, and explores patterns of FMM and violence. Results lead to rejection of hypothesis 1 on similarities between FMC and NFMC, supporting hypothesis 2 on considerable diversitybetween them. Findingsonextended scope, strategiclocale, enduring forced migration problems and increased violence support hypothesis 3, challenging the placement of forced migration merely as a social or humanitarian domestic concern. Instead, results show a salient increase in FMM, coupled with more severe interstate violence and war, dangerously destabilizing regions worldwide. These patterns require the integration of forced migration within crisis frameworks, as a new research agenda, tounderstand thenatureof forcedmigrationin the 21stcentury andits impact.
AB - This study focuses on forced migration and interstate violence during international crises, as amajor security concernwith salientimplications forinternational relations stability. The empirical data consists of 229 crises designated as Forced Migration Crises (FMC), identified within the 374 crises of the International Crisis Behavior (ICB) project. The study outlines a framework for analyzing FMC compared with Non-Forced Migration Crises (NFMC), presents an index of Forced Migration Magnitude (FMM), and probes three hypotheses. It points to transformations in forced migration since WWII, compares crises with and without forced migration, and explores patterns of FMM and violence. Results lead to rejection of hypothesis 1 on similarities between FMC and NFMC, supporting hypothesis 2 on considerable diversitybetween them. Findingsonextended scope, strategiclocale, enduring forced migration problems and increased violence support hypothesis 3, challenging the placement of forced migration merely as a social or humanitarian domestic concern. Instead, results show a salient increase in FMM, coupled with more severe interstate violence and war, dangerously destabilizing regions worldwide. These patterns require the integration of forced migration within crisis frameworks, as a new research agenda, tounderstand thenatureof forcedmigrationin the 21stcentury andits impact.
KW - Crisis management
KW - Forced migration
KW - International crises
KW - Refugees
KW - Violence
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85097013665&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/jrs/feaa039
DO - 10.1093/jrs/feaa039
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AN - SCOPUS:85097013665
SN - 0951-6328
VL - 33
SP - 336
EP - 357
JO - Journal of Refugee Studies
JF - Journal of Refugee Studies
IS - 2
ER -