State Thought and Migration: Analysing the Ideological Underpinnings of Temporary Migration Programmes
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2025-03-18Autor
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info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionMetadatos
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. This paper analyses temporary migration programs (TMPs) as a manifestation
of the “State thought” ideology, drawing on Abdelmalek Sayad’s sociological framework.
Sayad considers the State central to the migration system, shaping perceptions and practices around migration through its ideological and structural dominance. The paper first
explores how the State constructs hegemonic ideologies around migration, emphasising
the dichotomy between nationals and non-nationals. TMPs epitomise these ideologies by
promoting utilitarian migration systems that maximise economic benefits while minimising
social integration. TMPs, such as agricultural guest worker schemes, enforce strict temporality, denying migrants permanence and full participation in host societies. Migrants
are treated as disposable labour, restricted by non-transferable permits, and confined to
precarious living conditions. The paper highlights the tension between the economic reliance on migrant labour and the State’s exclusionary policies, revealing TMPs as tools for
controlling and exploiting migrants while maintaining national homogeneity. Ultimately,
TMPs embody the pinnacle of “State thought”, balancing economic utility and sovereignty
by perpetuating provisionality, exclusion, and systemic exploitation. The paper concludes
by acknowledging migrants’ agency as they navigate and resist the structural constraints
of TMPs to pursue personal and collective goals, challenging these programmes’ colonial
and utilitarian underpinnings.
State Thought and Migration: Analysing the Ideological Underpinnings of Temporary Migration Programmes
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistasISSN
2313-5778Palabras Clave
.Abdelmalek Sayad; temporary migration programs; state thought; labour migration; migrant farmworkers