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Infiltrators Go Home! Explaining Xenophobic Mobilization Against Asylum Seekers in Israel

Yoav H. Duman ()
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Yoav H. Duman: University of Washington

Journal of International Migration and Integration, 2015, vol. 16, issue 4, No 21, 1254 pages

Abstract: Abstract This article explores recent outbreaks of protest and violence against asylum-seekers in Israel. I posit that while existing approaches to anti-immigrant mobilization that primarily emphasize material and cultural forms of inter-group competition offer important explanatory foundations, they are insufficient to account fully for these outcomes. Instead, I argue that Israel’s explicit interests vis-à-vis recent influxes of asylum-seekers, namely, forestalling long-term settlement and avoiding the liberalization of its asylum regime, generated two mechanisms that ultimately sparked xenophobic mobilization. First, center-right politicians disseminated and progressively intensified exclusionary discourses and legal practices as a means of mobilizing popular support for exclusion and delegitimizing asylum claims. These practices problematized asylum-seekers’ presence through their construction as security, demographic, and economic threats, and generated increasing societal concerns. Second, a concurrent ‘hands off’ approach excluded asylum-seekers from access to state services, denying them material and social support while limiting their access to the labor market. This approach occasioned multiple adverse consequences for both asylum-seekers and host communities, and prompted perceptions of state incapacity to implement its own exclusionary policies. The analysis suggests that the interaction between these two mechanisms, coupled with concurrent legal constraints on long-term incarceration and repatriation, furnished the motive, opportunity, and legitimacy for anti-asylum-seeker mobilization.

Keywords: Asylum seekers; Undocumented migration; Xenophobic mobilization; Migrants in Israel; Asylum policy; Immigrant exclusion (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2015
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DOI: 10.1007/s12134-014-0400-2

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