WP_18-06
A Bundle of Bundles of Rights – International Treaties Regarding Migration in the Light of the Theory of Property Rights
by Stefan Schlegel
Working Papers WP 18-06
October 2018
ISSN 2192-2357 (MMG Working Papers Print)
Full text: pdf
Abstract:
A growing literature discusses the access of migrants to property rights over assets as a requirement for the protection of their human rights and basic interests. Little attention, however, has been paid to the fact that the right to decide to migrate to a given place is itself a property right. This paper aims to close this gap by describing international treaties regarding migration as mechanisms to transfer bundles of these property rights. This approach allows for the comparison of the distributional effects of different treaties regarding migration. It also allows to demonstrate that such treaties often do not limit themselves to transactions of property rights among states but are capable of transacting property rights from states to individuals. A property rights approach highlights that the exclusion of potential immigrants from would-be receiving countries means to impose a – sometimes negative – external effect on them and their country of origin. A review of different types of treaties highlights the tendency in all of them to internalize such external effects. The paper thus predicts that the prevention of migration will get more expensive as the external effects of this activity will have to be internalized to a growing degree.
Keywords: International Migration Governance, International Treaties, Theory of Property Rights, Internalization, Non-standard agreements
Author:
Stefan Schlegel works as a Senior Research Fellow in the Department Ethics, Law and Politics at the MPI. He studied Law in Zurich. In 2016 he obtained his Ph.D. from the University of Berne. His first book deals with the property right over migration and its distribution through immigration law. It was published in German in 2017 with Mohr Siebeck.