The Dissolution of International Borders (Keeping the World Company)
How Does this Affect our World. The hosts for this show are Jay Fidell and Tim Apicella. The guest is Jean Rosenfeld.
Borders have been dissolving for a long time. See what has happened in Western Europe – you can often go from one country to another without being inspected. And migrants can come from the Middle East and North Africa, as well as Central Asia. Why? How does that affect the countries they are migrating to and how does it affect the countries they are leaving.
At first it seemed that the borders of Europe were open to migration, but now it is not so clear, and the flow of migrants has led to right wing political backlash in a number of countries. Likewise, the flow of Latin American migrants across the southern border of the United States has led to right wing political backlash here.
We can control entry by common carrier, that is by planes, trains and busses, but it is more difficult to control migration through the back woods. Although you’d think that with modern technology any country can identify people who enter the country legally or illegally, the fact is that many countries, including the US, have no handle on that and have not reformed their immigration systems to deal with the changing times.
As we have seen in Europe, integrating a migration from the global south requires significant effort and resources in the host country. Some migrants do not easily assimilate and some members of the host countries are unsympathetic to their entry. Of course, this can create social, cultural, racial, political, and public safety problems in the host country. While there are humanitarian and moral benefits, those migrations therefore need to be thoughtfully managed.
Where open borders were once an expression of international enlightenment, with the increase of global migration things have become more complex and have raised a multitude of challenges: the protection of the culture and civil society of the host country, the assimilation of migrant communities into the host country, dealing with the costs and impacts of that assimilation, and maintaining humanitarian care in the host country for the members of the migrant community.
Where will this all go? What are the impacts on the host communities, on the migrant communities, and on the communities the migrants have left. From a social and cultural point of view, clearly, the world is in many ways being reordered. We need to understand how that works, and how to ameliorate the effects in order to avoid the conflict that may otherwise result.
That this is happening all over the world. Increasingly, it is affecting geopolitics, global economics, the flow of humanity (see the subject of Ai Weiwei’s 2017 Human Flow movie), and the state of health and welfare of humanity in general. From a human perspective, should be addressing these things, but are we doing that?
The ThinkTech YouTube Playlist for this show is https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLQpkwcNJny6lLnYB4hmXsiIXNcOEmb5Dg
Please visit our ThinkTech website at https://thinktechhawaii.com and see our Think Tech Advisories at https://thinktechadvisories.blogspot.com.
ThinkTech Hawaii streams from 10:00 am to 5:00 pm HST on weekdays. Check us out any time for great content and great community.
If you have any questions, please send them to: questions@thinktechhawaii.com.
Our vision is to be a leader in shaping a more vital and thriving Hawaii as the foundation for future generations. Our mission is to be the leading digital media platform raising public awareness and promoting civic engagement in Hawaii.
ThinkTech Hawaii is a Hawaii Non-Profit Corporation:
President and CEO – Jay Fidell
Executive VP and COO – Carol Mon Lee
Production Manager – Hayley Ikeda
Administration Manager – Maria Sabio
Station Manager – Michael Pangilinan
Broadband Provider – Servpac Inc.
Underwriters:
Atherton Family Foundation
Carol Mon Lee
Center for Microbial Oceanography Research and Education
Michael Sklarz
The Cooke Foundation
Hawaii Energy
Hawaii Energy Policy Forum
Hawaiian Electric
Galen Ho of Immersive Worlds
Kamehameha Schools
Roberts S. Toyofuku and Pacific Law Institute
Sharon Y. Moriwaki
Shidler Family Foundation
Sidney Stern Memorial Trust
Volo Foundation
Yuriko J. Sugimura
ThinkTech treats this video as licensed under a creative commons license, and invites the public to view, distribute, disseminate and share it under the terms of that license.
The information in this video is not to be relied upon as legal, medical, accounting or other professional advice. For legal, medical, accounting or any other advice, please consult with your own professionals.
The views and opinions expressed by the hosts and guests in this video are their own and do not necessarily represent the views and opinions of ThinkTech, its management or staff or other organizations with which our hosts and guests are associated.