Introduction.- Section One: History, Rights, Policy and Protocols.- Chapter 1: Forced Migration and the Failure of Governance.- Chapter 2: Public Policy and Migration in Africa: A Multi-Theoretical Approach.- Chapter 3: Migration and Human Rights in Africa.- Chapter 4: The Global Border Industrial Complex and Eastern Africa: Analysing the Political Economy of Transnational Migration.- Chapter 5: Migration and Human Rights in Africa: The Policy and Legal Framework in Broad Strokes.- Section Two: Regional Perspectives and Implications.- Chapter 6: African migrants in Poland 1945 – 2019.- Chapter 7: Globalizing forces on migration? A Dual Process.- Chapter 8: Non-Recognition and Its Implications: African Asylum Seekers in Israel.- Chapter 9: Rise of Populist Parties in the Era of Migration Crisis.- Chapter 10: African Migration to Brazil in the Twenty-First Century: New Trajectories and Old Paradigms.- Chapter 11: Libya and African Migration to Europe.- Section Three: Impact, Cost, and Consequences.- Chapter 12: Evaporating Mediterranean: The Fate of Migrants in a Shrinking Sea Commons”.- Chapter 13: Criminalizing the Mediterranean Crossing: The Regulation of Migrants, Refugees, and Rescue Missions at Europe's Southern Borders.- Chapter 14: Skilled Female New Canadians and Mental-Health Challenges: Effect of Unemployment and Underemployment.- Chapter 15: The Human Cost of the Refugee Crisis in Africa.- Chapter 16: The Political Economy of Transnational Migration: A Case Study of Nigerian Immigrants in The United States.
Olayiwola Abegunrin is Professor of International
Relations, African Studies, and Political Economy, Howard
University and the University of Maryland, US. He is a Carnegie
Mellon Foundation Fellow. His teaching and research focus is on
International Relations, African Politics, Political Economy and
U.S. Foreign Policy.
Sabella Ogbobode Abidde is an Associate Professor of
Political Science and member of the graduate faculty at Alabama
State University, US, where he teaches courses in comparative
politics, international relations, African politics and
institutions, and the politics of developing nations.
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