标准化避难:美国难民重新安置计划的管道和途径

IF 7.1 1区 社会学 Q1 SOCIOLOGY
Jake Watson
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引用次数: 1

摘要

官僚机构如何形成持久的不平等?主要的方法强调行政类别的作用,根据更广泛的人的价值制度,优先考虑某些人口的宝贵资源。本文通过研究分类不平等如何嵌入到行政基础设施和制度途径中来扩展这一工作体系。我通过对美国难民安置计划的一个案例研究来发展这一论点。我综合了以前看不见的政府统计数据、专家访谈和文献分析,表明美国的移民安置是通过行政管道组织的,这在稀缺的移民安置空间的分配中造成了路径依赖的不平衡。移民价值的社会和政治逻辑很重要,但要充分理解这些不平衡,需要关注管道自我复制的趋势。我确定了造成这种趋势的三个因素:计算原理、管理反应性和结构化可见性。这种由三部分组成的管道概念化可以应用于其他制度背景,以研究社会不平等的起源、动态和持久性。我的研究结果还证明了政策管理在形成移民选择中的种族不平衡方面的分析自主作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Standardizing Refuge: Pipelines and Pathways in the U.S. Refugee Resettlement Program
How do bureaucracies pattern durable inequalities? Predominant approaches emphasize the role of administrative categories, which prioritize certain populations for valued resources based on broader regimes of human worth. This article extends this body of work by examining how categorical inequalities become embedded within administrative infrastructures and institutional pathways. I develop this argument through a case study of the United States’ refugee resettlement program. Drawing together previously unseen government statistics, expert interviews, and documentary analysis, I show that U.S. resettlement is organized through administrative pipelines that create path dependent imbalances in the distribution of scarce resettlement spaces. Social and political logics of immigrant worthiness are important, yet a full understanding of these imbalances requires attention to the tendency of pipelines to become self-reproducing. I identify three factors that account for this tendency: calculative rationales, administrative reactivity, and structured visibility. This three-part conceptualization of pipelines can be applied to other institutional contexts to study the origins, dynamics, and durability of social inequalities. My findings also demonstrate the analytically autonomous role of policy administration in shaping ethnoracial imbalances in immigrant selection.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
13.30
自引率
3.30%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: The American Sociological Association (ASA) is a non-profit membership association established in 1905. Its mission is to advance sociology as a scientific discipline and profession that serves the public good. ASA is comprised of approximately 12,000 members including faculty members, researchers, practitioners, and students in the field of sociology. Roughly 20% of the members work in government, business, or non-profit organizations. One of ASA's primary endeavors is the publication and dissemination of important sociological research. To this end, they founded the American Sociological Review (ASR) in 1936. ASR is the flagship journal of the association and publishes original works that are of general interest and contribute to the advancement of sociology. The journal seeks to publish new theoretical developments, research results that enhance our understanding of fundamental social processes, and significant methodological innovations. ASR welcomes submissions from all areas of sociology, placing an emphasis on exceptional quality. Aside from ASR, ASA also publishes 14 professional journals and magazines. Additionally, they organize an annual meeting that attracts over 6,000 participants. ASA's membership consists of scholars, professionals, and students dedicated to the study and application of sociology in various domains of society.
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