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New publication introducing a novel historical immigration policy dataset, by Sara Kalm and others

Sara Kalm, photo.

Sara Kalm is one of the co-authors of the article “Historical Immigration Policies: Trends and Lessons” which has recently been published. The article, which presents a new data set, has Margaret E. Peters (UCLA) as lead author, and the other co-authors are Frida Boräng and Johannes Lindvall (Gothenburg University) and Adrian Shin (University of Colorado: Boulder).

Abstract

In recent years, scholars of migration have created several new immigration policy indexes, but most existing databases have limited temporal scope. They also focus, to a large extent, on the Global North. In this research note, we introduce the Historical Immigration Policy dataset (HIP), which begins to fill these gaps. We first provide an overview of the data and then describe how they offer new insights into immigration policy. We make three empirical observations. (1) On average, democracies are less open to immigration than authoritarian states but grant resident migrants more rights. (2) European states were open to immigration earlier than standard accounts of global migration assume. (3) Historically, openness to immigration and inclusive rights for resident migrants have often been complements, not substitutes.

Title: Historical Immigration Policies: Trends and Lessons

Publication: International Studies Quarterly, vol. 68, iss. 3, 2024.

Authors: Margaret E. Peters, Frida Boräng, Sara Kalm, Johannes Lindvall, Adrian Shin

Link to the article: https://doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqae084

Sara Kalm — Lund University