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Forced Migration and Global Processes Francois Crepeau

Forced Migration and Global Processes By Francois Crepeau

Forced Migration and Global Processes by Francois Crepeau


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Summary

Forced Migration and Global Processes considers the crossroads of forced migration with three global trends: development, human rights, and security. This expert collection studies these complex interactions and aims to help determine what solutions may alleviate most of the human suffering involved in forced migrations.

Forced Migration and Global Processes Summary

Forced Migration and Global Processes: A View from Forced Migration Studies by Francois Crepeau

Migration is at the center of much of the discussion on globalization. Migrants move across borders and thus defy state-centered traditions. Migration is often caused or influenced by aspects of global change: the transformation of the world economy with the expansion of free trade, the modification of the world balance of power and the challenge of global insecurity, the emergence of the global environment as an important political issue, and the redefinition of the role of communities in shaping identities when faced with networks of migrants and diasporas. Forced Migration and Global Processes considers the crossroads of forced migration with three global trends: development, human rights, and security. This expert collection studies these complex interactions and aims to help determine what solutions may alleviate most of the human suffering involved in forced migrations.

About Francois Crepeau

Fran_ois CrZpeau is a Professor of International Law at the University of Montreal, Canada. He holds a Canada Research Chair on International Migration Law and is Scientific Director of the Centre for International Studies (CYRIUM). Delphine Nakache is a Research Associate at the Canada Research Chair on International Migration Law at the University of Montreal, Canada. Michael Collyer is a research fellow in the Department of Geography and the Sussex Centre for Migration Research at the University of Sussex, UK. Nathaniel H. Goetz is Interim Director of the Forced Migration Laboratory at the University of California, San Diego Center for Comparative Immigration Studies (CCIS). Art Hansen is an Associate Professor in the Department of International Affairs and Development, Clark Atlanta University (Atlanta, Georgia) with thirteen years of experience living and working in Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America. Renu Modi is a political scientist who teaches at the Department of African Studies, University of Mumbai, India. Aninia Nadig is a refugee policy specialist based in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. She currently coordinates the Working Group on International Refugee Policy. Sanja _poljar Vryina, M.D., Ph.D., is Scientific Advisor at the Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar in Zagreb, Croatia and a Professor of Anthropology at the University of Zagreb. Loes H. M. Van Willigan, M.D., Ph.D., is a consultant on health and human rights.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 The International Refugee Convention: National Identity as a Limitation on Compliance Chapter 3 A Pragmatic Solution, Revisited: Evaluating the Successes and Failures of a Self-Sufficiency and Integration Programme for Rwandese Refugees in Burundi, 1962-1976 Chapter 4 Displacement by Development and Moral Responsibility: A Theoretical Treatment Chapter 5 Involuntary Resettlement in the Three Gorges Dam Area in the Perspective of Forced Migration Due to Hydraulic Planning in China Chapter 6 I Went as Far as My Money Would Take Me: Conflict, Forced Migration and Class Chapter 7 Relief and Development as Flawed Models for the Provision of Assistance to Refugees in Camps Chapter 8 Globalization of Human Rights and its Impact on Internally Displaced Kurds in Turkey Chapter 9 Beyond Exile: Refugee Strategies in Transnational Contexts Chapter 10 Is the Australian Refugee Review Tribunal Institutionally Biased? Chapter 11 Challenge without Transformation: Refugees, Aid, and Trade in Western Tanzania Chapter 12 Protection, Threat and Movement of Persons: Examining the Relationship of Terrorism and Migration in EU Law after 11 September 2001 Chapter 13 Community Services In Refugee Aid Programmes: Leading the Way in the Empowerment of Refugees or a Sop to Humanitarian Consciences? Chapter 14 Just A Refugee: Rights and Status of Refugees in New Zealand Chapter 15 Terrorism and the Non-Derogability of Non-Refoulement

Additional information

NLS9780739112762
9780739112762
0739112767
Forced Migration and Global Processes: A View from Forced Migration Studies by Francois Crepeau
New
Paperback
Lexington Books
2006-05-14
424
N/A
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