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Symbolic Refugee Protection: Explaining Latin America’s Liberal Refugee Laws

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 September 2022

OMAR HAMMOUD-GALLEGO*
Affiliation:
The London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom
LUISA FELINE FREIER*
Affiliation:
Universidad del Pacifico, Lima, Peru
*
Omar Hammoud-Gallego, Fellow in Political Science and Public Policy, School of Public Policy, London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom, o.hammoud-gallego@lse.ac.uk.
Luisa Feline Freier, Associate Professor of Social and Political Sciences, Department of Social and Political Science, Universidad del Pacifico, Lima, Peru, lf.freierd@up.edu.pe.
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Abstract

What drove an entire region in the Global South to significantly expand refugee protection in the early twenty-first century? In this paper, we test and build on political refugee theory via a mixed-methods approach to explain the liberalization of refugee legislation across Latin America. First, we use data from the new APLA Database, which measures legislative liberalization over a 30-year period, and test both general and region-specific immigration and refugee policy determinants through a series of nested Tobit and linear spatial panel-data regressions. Our models do not support some consistent predictors of policy liberalization identified by the literature such as immigrant and refugee stocks, democratization, and the number of emigrants, but they offer statistical evidence for the importance of leftist government ideology and regional integration. We then shed light on the causal mechanisms behind these correlations for two extreme but diverse cases: Argentina and Mexico. Based on process tracing and elite interviews, we suggest that the reason that leftist political ideology rather than institutional democratization and number of emigrants matters for policy liberalization is that Latin American executives embarked on symbolic human and migrant’s rights discourses that ultimately enabled legislative change.

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Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Political Science Association
Figure 0

Table 1. Determinants of Asylum and Migration Policies as Identified by the Literature

Figure 1

Table 2. Tobit Model on Regulatory Complexity

Figure 2

Table 3. Tobit Model on Regulatory Complexity

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Table 4. Regulatory Complexity Spatial Panel-Data Models with Country-Year Fixed Effects

Figure 4

Figure 1. Human Rights Treaties and Asylum Legislation in ArgentinaSource: APLA Dataset.

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Figure 2. Human Rights Treaties and Asylum Legislation in MexicoSource: APLA Dataset.

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Figure 3. Refugees and Asylum Seekers in Latin America (1970–2020)Source: UNHCR Population Database.

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Figure 4. Refugees and People in Refugee-Like Situations in Argentina and Mexico (1970–2020)Source: UNHCR Population Database

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