Contenu du sommaire : Externalisation / With States increasingly taking action beyond their own borders to prevent the arrival of refugees and asylum seekers, we examine the consequences for protection.
Revue | Migrations forcées |
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Numéro | Numéro 68, Novembre 2021 |
Titre du numéro | Externalisation / With States increasingly taking action beyond their own borders to prevent the arrival of refugees and asylum seekers, we examine the consequences for protection. |
Texte intégral en ligne | Accessible sur l'internet |
Externalisation
- Externalisation of international protection: UNHCR's perspective - Madeline Garlick p. 4
- Conceptualising externalisation: still fit for purpose? - Nikolas Feith Tan p. 8
- Why resettlement quotas cannot replace asylum systems - Bernd Parusel p. 10
- Pushbacks on the Balkan route: a hallmark of EU border externalisation - Gigi Aulsebrook, Natalie Gruber and Melissa Pawson p. 13
- Frontex cooperation with third countries: examining the human rights implications - Mariana Gkliati and Jane Kilpatrick p. 16
- Extraterritorial asylum processing: the Libya-Niger Emergency Transit Mechanism - Laura Lambert p. 18
- From complementary to ‘primary' pathways to asylum: a word on the ‘right to flee' - Violeta Moreno-Lax p. 21
- Challenging the legality of externalisation in Oceania, Europe and South America: an impossible task? - Luisa Feline Freier, Eleni Karageorgiou and Kate Ogg p. 23
- Lessons from Australia's Pacific Solution - Neha Prasad p. 27
- Challenging externalisation: is litigation the answer? - Jessica Marsh p. 29
- Expanding Canada's borders - Claire Ellis, Idil Atak and Zainab Abu Alrob p. 33
- Denmark's new externalisation law: motives and consequences - Martin Lemberg-Pedersen, Zachary Whyte and Ahlam Chemlali p. 36
- US remote health controls: the past and present of externalisation - David Scott FitzGerald p. 39
- Eyes in the sky: European aerial surveillance - Angela Smith p. 42
- Externalisation, immigration detention and the Committee on Migrant Workers - Michael Flynn p. 44
- The Khartoum Process and human trafficking - Audrey Lumley-Sapanski, Katarina Schwarz and Ana Valverde-Cano p. 46
Mobility and agency in protacted displacement
- Understanding the dynamics of protracted displacement - Albert Kraler, Benjamin Etzold and Nuno Ferreira p. 49
- Mobility dynamics in protracted displacement: Eritreans and Congolese on the move - Carolien Jacobs and Markus Rudolf p. 52
- Family networks and Syrian refugees' mobility aspirations - Sarah A Tobin, Fawwaz Momani, Tamara Adel Al Yakoub and Rola Fares AlMassad p. 56
- ‘Constrained mobility': a feature of protracted displacement in Greece and Italy - Panos Hatziprokopiou, Evangelia Papatzani, Ferruccio Pastore and Emanuela Roman p. 59
- Humanitarian Admission Programmes: how networks enable mobility in contexts of protracted displacement - Benjamin Etzold and Simone Christ p. 63