At the turn of the twenty-first century, with the amount of money emigrants sent home soaring to new highs, governments around the world began searching for ways to capitalize on emigration for economic growth, and they looked to nations that already had policies in place. Morocco and Mexico featured prominently as sources of “best practices” in this area, with tailor-made financial instruments that brought migrants into the banking system, captured remittances for national development projects, fostered partnerships with emigrants for infrastructure design and provision, hosted transnational forums for development planning, and emboldened cross-border political lobbies.

In Creative State, 2003 IDRF Fellow Natasha Iskander chronicles how these innovative policies emerged and evolved over forty years. She reveals that the Moroccan and Mexican policies emulated as models of excellence were not initially devised to link emigration to development, but rather were deployed to strengthen both governments’ domestic hold on power. The process of policy design, however, was so iterative and improvisational that neither the governments nor their migrant constituencies ever predicted, much less intended, the ways the new initiatives would gradually but fundamentally redefine nationhood, development, and citizenship. Morocco’s and Mexico’s experiences with migration and development policy demonstrate that far from being a prosaic institution resistant to change, the state can be a remarkable site of creativity, an essential but often overlooked component of good governance. Buy it here.

Publication Details

Title
Creative State: Forty Years of Migration and Development Policy in Morocco and Mexico
Authors
Iskander, Natasha Nefertiti
Publisher
Cornell University / Cornell University Press
Publish Date
2010
ISBN
978-0801475993
Citation
Iskander, Natasha Nefertiti, Creative State: Forty Years of Migration and Development Policy in Morocco and Mexico (Cornell University / Cornell University Press, 2010).
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