000 01459nam a2200157Ia 4500
008 181130s2018 xx 000 0 und d
100 _aTsourapas, Gerasimos
245 _aAuthoritarian emigration states:
_bsoft power and cross-border mobility in the Middle East
260 _c2018
300 _ap.400-416.
504 _dJun
520 _aCan labor emigration form part of a state�s foreign policy goals? The relevant literature links emigration to states� developmental needs, which does not explain why some states choose to economically subsidize their citizens� emigration. This article explores for the first time the soft power importance of high-skilled emigration from authoritarian emigration states. It finds that the Egyptian state under Gamal Abdel Nasser employed labor emigration for two distinct purposes linked to broader soft power interests: first, as an instrument of cultural diplomacy to spread revolutionary ideals of Arab unity and anti-imperialism across the Middle East; second, as a tool for disseminating development aid, particularly in Yemen and sub-Saharan Africa. Drawing on Arabic and non-Arabic primary sources, the article identifies the interplay between foreign policy and cross-border mobility, while also sketching an evolving research agenda on authoritarian emigration states� policy-making. - Reproduced.
650 _aMigration
773 _aInternational Political Science Review
906 _aMigration
999 _c506686
_d506686