Handbook on Migration and Social Policy 2016
DOI: 10.4337/9781783476299.00034
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Why migrant rights are different than human rights

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Cited by 6 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…The Trafficking Treaty was quickly and widely ratified whereas the Migrant Rights Treaty was not. Indeed, the disparity in ratification is so severe that they came into effect in the same year despite the Migrant Rights Treaty having been 14 One problem with comparing the Migrant Rights Treaty to other human rights agreements is that the treaty has one crucial difference in that it regulates the state's actions vis-a-vis non-citizens, whereas all other human rights agreements focus primarily on the relationship between citizens and the state (Money, Lockhart & Western 2016) created some ten years earlier. To this day, ratification of the Migrant Rights Treaty remains low.…”
Section: Migrant Rights Vs Human Trafficking: Bargaining Power and Rmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Trafficking Treaty was quickly and widely ratified whereas the Migrant Rights Treaty was not. Indeed, the disparity in ratification is so severe that they came into effect in the same year despite the Migrant Rights Treaty having been 14 One problem with comparing the Migrant Rights Treaty to other human rights agreements is that the treaty has one crucial difference in that it regulates the state's actions vis-a-vis non-citizens, whereas all other human rights agreements focus primarily on the relationship between citizens and the state (Money, Lockhart & Western 2016) created some ten years earlier. To this day, ratification of the Migrant Rights Treaty remains low.…”
Section: Migrant Rights Vs Human Trafficking: Bargaining Power and Rmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most of the literature on the CRMW focuses broadly on why ratification has been difficult to achieve (Hune and Niessen 1994) and specifically on why immigrant-receiving states, which advocate for human rights in other spheres, refuse to ratify it (Money et al 2016;Wong 2015;Ruhs 2012;Ruhs 2013;Vucetic 2007). But, given that many migrant-sending states have also refused to ratify this agreement, explanations that focus solely on the costs of ratification for immigrant-receiving states are insufficient.…”
Section: The Limitations Of Existing Explanationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…poor records on immigrant rights themselves. 8 These states focused on their role in sending migrants, rather than reflecting on their own treatment of foreigners (Lonnroth 1991;Böhning 1991;Martin 2014;Money et al 2016). While these states made moral arguments about migrant human rights during the negotiations, their statements focused largely on condemning immigrant-receiving states for their poor policies (Lonnroth 1991).…”
Section: The Limitations Of Existing Explanationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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