UNDERSTANDING DILEMMA FOR JUSTICE: EXPATRIATES, MOBILITY AND HUMAN SECURITY
Abstract
Despite indications by states about the significance of international migration to their economic growth and cultural diversity, migration is frequently portrayed as a problem with expatriates viewed as societal risks. This has created tensions between national and international priorities, laws, coexistence, and a rise in state coercion. This study examines the positive peace and security experienced by expatriates across the globe and suggests innovative interventions. Qualitative content analysis was employed to provide broad discernments into human security issues, injustices, and developments not mostly encapsulated by traditional methods of data analysis. Content analysis in this study was appropriate as it is mostly used in the social sciences supported by new optical scanning systems and analytical techniques. Positive peace, security, and mobility justice are crucial ethical and political concerns of our time when the globe is faced with the challenges of uneven and uncertain contours of mobility and expatriates. The international managing bodies are wrestling with a string of crises linked to global humanitarianism refugee crisis, and global warming crisis. These concerns might look somewhat different in the Global North than they do in the Global South, nevertheless, these are interlocked regions, and therefore, unjust global mobility and expatriate insecurity are planetary and transnational problems that require collective efforts and a bottom-up approach for the benefit of all. The study provides new insights and spotlights new approaches to what should be done, to improve peace and security, and reduce the justice gap.