ReTHINK Before You Push Me Back is a forceful nonfiction examination of displacement, deportation, and the hidden political economy behind forced migration. Across borders, governments describe migrants and refugees as burdens. This book asks a sharper question: what if the same societies that threaten to expel them are already dependent on their labor, taxes, care work, skills, and sacrifice?Dr. M.
I. A. Nishan traces forced displacement from historical systems of extraction to today's deportation regimes, detention economies, credential barriers, climate pressures, debt structures, and labor shortages. Combining data, historical analysis, policy critique, and human-centered narrative, the book shows how modern border systems often convert vulnerability into economic value while denying recognition, stability, and belonging.
From undocumented tax contributions and care-sector dependence to the "brain waste" of skilled refugees and migrants, ReTHINK Before You Push Me Back challenges the burden myth with evidence. It argues that deportation is not merely a legal act; it can be fiscal self-harm, social disruption, and moral accounting deferred. Urgent, evidence-based, and uncompromising, this book calls for a new settlement built on recognition, responsibility, repair, and accountability.
For readers of political nonfiction, migration studies, human rights, public policy, and global political economy.
ReTHINK Before You Push Me Back is a forceful nonfiction examination of displacement, deportation, and the hidden political economy behind forced migration. Across borders, governments describe migrants and refugees as burdens. This book asks a sharper question: what if the same societies that threaten to expel them are already dependent on their labor, taxes, care work, skills, and sacrifice?Dr. M.
I. A. Nishan traces forced displacement from historical systems of extraction to today's deportation regimes, detention economies, credential barriers, climate pressures, debt structures, and labor shortages. Combining data, historical analysis, policy critique, and human-centered narrative, the book shows how modern border systems often convert vulnerability into economic value while denying recognition, stability, and belonging.
From undocumented tax contributions and care-sector dependence to the "brain waste" of skilled refugees and migrants, ReTHINK Before You Push Me Back challenges the burden myth with evidence. It argues that deportation is not merely a legal act; it can be fiscal self-harm, social disruption, and moral accounting deferred. Urgent, evidence-based, and uncompromising, this book calls for a new settlement built on recognition, responsibility, repair, and accountability.
For readers of political nonfiction, migration studies, human rights, public policy, and global political economy.