Migrants serving migrants? Representative bureaucracy at the front lines of migration management
Migrants serving migrants? Representative bureaucracy at the front lines of migration management
The ways in which minority street-level bureaucrats construe their identities as state representatives and as representatives of minority clients are known to inform their discretionary behavior toward clients, thereby shaping policy outcomes. While existing studies have examined race and ethnicity as shared identities between minority bureaucrats and clients, the role of “migrant” identity has been overlooked. Focusing on the so-called European migration crisis of 2015–2017, this study addresses this gap. Drawing on qualitative interviews with migrant bureaucrats, it examines how being simultaneously a migrant and a migration policy implementer shapes bureaucratic discretion. This article introduces the notion of “migrant representative” and identifies four profiles of migrant bureaucrats, each corresponding to different degrees of identification with the local migration management system and the migrant clients. In doing so, it contributes to the literature on representative bureaucracy and the debate on the linkage between passive and active representation.
Glyniadaki, Katerina
88fdefb3-8694-431c-98ff-e16419f19b4a
16 October 2024
Glyniadaki, Katerina
88fdefb3-8694-431c-98ff-e16419f19b4a
Glyniadaki, Katerina
(2024)
Migrants serving migrants? Representative bureaucracy at the front lines of migration management.
Journal of Public Policy.
(doi:10.1017/S0143814X24000217).
Abstract
The ways in which minority street-level bureaucrats construe their identities as state representatives and as representatives of minority clients are known to inform their discretionary behavior toward clients, thereby shaping policy outcomes. While existing studies have examined race and ethnicity as shared identities between minority bureaucrats and clients, the role of “migrant” identity has been overlooked. Focusing on the so-called European migration crisis of 2015–2017, this study addresses this gap. Drawing on qualitative interviews with migrant bureaucrats, it examines how being simultaneously a migrant and a migration policy implementer shapes bureaucratic discretion. This article introduces the notion of “migrant representative” and identifies four profiles of migrant bureaucrats, each corresponding to different degrees of identification with the local migration management system and the migrant clients. In doing so, it contributes to the literature on representative bureaucracy and the debate on the linkage between passive and active representation.
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Accepted/In Press date: 7 August 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 October 2024
Published date: 16 October 2024
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 495736
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495736
ISSN: 0143-814X
PURE UUID: d79ab62f-5086-4fe2-beac-a603b9b3467a
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Date deposited: 21 Nov 2024 17:35
Last modified: 23 Nov 2024 03:12
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Author:
Katerina Glyniadaki
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