Asylum Migration, Borders, and Terrorism in a Structural Gravity Model
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Carril Caccia, FedericoEditorial
Cogitatio
Materia
Asylum migration Forced migration Internally displaced persons Structural gravity Terrorism
Date
2021-10-28Referencia bibliográfica
Carril-Caccia, F., Paniagua, J., & Requena, F. (2021). Asylum Migration, Borders, and Terrorism in a Structural Gravity Model. Politics and Governance, 9(4), 146-158. doi:[https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.v9i4.4438]
Sponsorship
Junta de Andalucia SEJ 413; Generalitat Valenciana European Commission General Electric GV Prometeo 2018/102 GV/2020/012; Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (FEDER) RTI2018-100899-B-I00; Kellogg Institute for International Studies (University of Notre Dame)Abstract
In this article, we examine the impact of terrorist attacks on asylum‐related migration flows. So far, the literature that
examines the “push factors” such as terrorism that explain forced migration has omitted the fact that the vast majority of
people forced to flee typically do so toward other locations within the country. The novel feature of our research is the estimation
of a structural gravity equation that includes both international migration and internally displaced persons (IDP),
a theoretically consistent framework that allows us to identify country‐specific variables such as terror attacks. For that
purpose, we use information on the number of asylum applications, the number of IDP, and the number of terrorist attacks
in each country for a sample of 119 origin developing countries and 141 destination countries over 2009–2018. The empirical
results reveal several interesting and policy‐relevant traits. Firstly, forced migration abroad is still minimal compared
to IDP, but globalization forces are pushing up the ratio. Secondly, terror violence has a positive and significant effect on
asylum migration flows relative to the number of IDP. Thirdly, omitting internally displaced people biases downward the
impact of terrorism on asylum applications. Fourthly, we observe regional heterogeneity in the effect of terrorism on asylum
migration flows; in Latin America, terrorist attacks have a much larger impact on the number of asylum applications
relative to IDP than in Asia or Africa.