Individuals, authors, departments, and publishers may submit a nomination.The selection committee for the best book award reserves the right not to make an award in any particular year. The recipient will be announced at an IPMRD Working Group event by the end of 2020 (date tbc).The nominated book must have been published between 1 January 2019 and 31 December 2019 (authors may be required to provide proof that the book was published in the calendar year of 2019).Books for consideration must be monographs and cannot be edited volumes.Books should be nominated by individuals, authors, departments, or publishers.Books will be judged by the committee members on their rigour, originality and significance to the field. More details about the working group and its aims can be found on the group's webpages. The result is a set of highly original chapters, yielding not only new concepts of wider relevance to International Relations but also insights for academics, policy-makers, and practitioners working on forced migration in particular and humanitarianism in general.The International Politics of Migration, Refugees and Diaspora Working Group (IPMRD) is delighted to announce that nominations for its second Annual Best Book Award, for a monograph published in the field of international politics of migration during the previous year (2019), are now open.īooks should meet the thematic focus of the working group, which includes securitisation of borders transnational diaspora, refugee and migrant politics the relation and tensions between migration, human rights and citizenship. They engage with some of the most challenging political and practical questions in contemporary forced migration, including peacebuilding, post-conflict reconstruction, and statebuilding. The insights draw from across the theoretical spectrum of International Relations from realism to critical theory to feminism, covering issues including international cooperation, security, and the international political economy. This volume therefore represents an attempt to bridge the divide between these disciplines, and to place refugees within the mainstream of International Relations.ĭrawing together the work and ideas of a combination of the world's leading and emerging International Relations scholars, the volume considers what ideas from International Relations can offer our understanding of the international politics of forced migration. Yet, scholars of International Relations have generally bypassed the study of refugees, and Forced Migration Studies has generally bypassed insights from International Relations. The causes and consequences of, and responses to, human displacement are intertwined with many of the core concerns of International Relations. Refugees lie at the heart of world politics.
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