1️⃣Should migrants have equal rights w natives or be privileged over them?
2️⃣What attracts them: political freedoms, economic incentives or social recognition?
3️⃣Should there be numerical limits to immigration?
My new article tells how 17–18th pol economists replied
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Depressed by the xenophobia around us?
🧚
Escape to the 17th century where theories compete to answer the question
HOW TO ATTRACT IMMIGRANTS ?
- my new article
in International #Migration & Integration (2026).
doi.org/10.1007/s121...
1️⃣Should migrants have equal rights w natives or be privileged over them?
2️⃣What attracts them: political freedoms, economic incentives or social recognition?
3️⃣Should there be numerical limits to immigration?
My new article tells how 17–18th pol economists replied
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Dans le dernier numéro, Robert Kramm, La Nōson Seinen Sha, commune anarchiste dans le Japon impérial : théoriser et vivre la révolution (1931)
et sur le travail de Pierre Vilar, par Pablo F. Luna
Le prochain "Liberté de circulation" arrive bientôt, préparé par Speranta Dumitru @spe07.bsky.social
« Sociologie des algorithmes » doi.org/10.3917/zil....
Immigration make Britain brilliant
Quels premiers ministres ont banalisé les idées d’extrême droite ? app.theconversation.fr/deeplink/art...
La gêne du passeport, au-delà de Trump
- mon article sur l'histoire du passeport pas sur le type
theconversation.com/la-gene-du-p...
Depressed by the xenophobia around us?
🧚
Escape to the 17th century where theories compete to answer the question
HOW TO ATTRACT IMMIGRANTS ?
- my new article
in International #Migration & Integration (2026).
doi.org/10.1007/s121...
La gêne du passeport, au-delà de Trump
- mon article sur l'histoire du passeport pas sur le type
theconversation.com/la-gene-du-p...
The push-pull theory is regarded as a modern framework in migration studies. This article challenges this view by tracing debates on attracting and retaining foreigners back to the seventeenth century...
link.springer.com
The push-pull theory is regarded as a modern framework in migration studies. This article challenges this view by tracing debates on attracting and retaining foreigners back to the seventeenth century...
Les Cahiers d’histoire. Revue d’histoire critique sont une revue trimestrielle, organisée pour chaque numéro autour d’un dossier thématique qui donne son titre au volume. Cette revue généraliste se...
The push-pull theory is regarded as a modern framework in migration studies. This article challenges this view by tracing debates on attracting and retaining foreigners back to the seventeenth century. It compares four major economic theories and their policy prescriptions concerning immigration. Mercantilism held that to be wealthy, a sovereign state should possess gold and a large population. The article explores three other theories: cameralism, physiocracy, and classical economics. While cameralists held similar views to mercantilists, physiocrats and classical economists fundamentally disagreed. But did their theoretical disputes translate into divergent immigration prescriptions? This article shows that despite disagreements on wealth, money, and population, the four theories converged on an “overlapping consensus” regarding migration. After reviewing the major authors of each school, I reconstruct their arguments around three dilemmas. First, should migrants receive equal rights with natives or be privileged over them? Second, what is the nature of pull factors: are they political (rights, tolerance, freedom, participation), economic (fiscal relief, subventions), or social (cultural ethos, language, respect), geographical (climate, distance, mobility infrastructures)? Thirdly, what are the limits of attracting immigrants: are there numerical limits or socio-professional requirements, like skills selection? Although answers were similar across theories, these debates remain understudied in contemporary migration theory.
doi.org
Une étude des discours de politique générale depuis 1959 montre que les premiers ministres du centristes ont contribué à accélérer le glissement vers les idées d’extrême droite.
La polémique liée à l’apparition du visage de Donald Trump sur une série limitée de passeports des États-Unis rappelle que ce document a toujours été perçu comme une vexation administrative.
theconversation.com
The push-pull theory is regarded as a modern framework in migration studies. This article challenges this view by tracing debates on attracting and retaining foreigners back to the seventeenth century. It compares four major economic theories and their policy prescriptions concerning immigration. Mercantilism held that to be wealthy, a sovereign state should possess gold and a large population. The article explores three other theories: cameralism, physiocracy, and classical economics. While cameralists held similar views to mercantilists, physiocrats and classical economists fundamentally disagreed. But did their theoretical disputes translate into divergent immigration prescriptions? This article shows that despite disagreements on wealth, money, and population, the four theories converged on an “overlapping consensus” regarding migration. After reviewing the major authors of each school, I reconstruct their arguments around three dilemmas. First, should migrants receive equal rights with natives or be privileged over them? Second, what is the nature of pull factors: are they political (rights, tolerance, freedom, participation), economic (fiscal relief, subventions), or social (cultural ethos, language, respect), geographical (climate, distance, mobility infrastructures)? Thirdly, what are the limits of attracting immigrants: are there numerical limits or socio-professional requirements, like skills selection? Although answers were similar across theories, these debates remain understudied in contemporary migration theory.
doi.org
La polémique liée à l’apparition du visage de Donald Trump sur une série limitée de passeports des États-Unis rappelle que ce document a toujours été perçu comme une vexation administrative.