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“Typical labor market outcomes vary considerably between majority and migrant populations. Drawing on scholarship from across the social sciences, we assess competing micro- and macro-level explanations of differential occupational attainment among immigrant groups across 28 countries. The analyses of occupational attainment are run separately for first- and second-generation migrants as well as children of mixed marriage and take into account their wider social and cultural background. Results from four rounds of the European Social Survey show that people with a migration background do not necessarily achieve a lower labor market success than the majority. However, human capital, social mobility, and cultural background explain these outcomes to different degrees, suggesting tailored pathways to labor market success for each group of migrants. We also find that occupational attainment varies considerably across countries, although this is hardly attributable to immigration policies. These and other findings are discussed in the light of previous studies on immigrant incorporation.”
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“Germany, France, and the Netherlands have pursued different types of integration policies. Using data from a mixed method study, this paper investigates whether and how these differences have affected the settlement country and ethnic identification of the children of Turkish immigrants. The results indicate that integration policies do not affect ethnic identification, but an inclusive policy has a positive impact on settlement country identification. Multicultural policies do not seem to have any effect. Despite processes of exclusion and self-exclusion in all three countries, our respondents have developed a strong connection to their settlement country and in particular to their place of residence.”
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“By treating the 1.5 generation as a distinctive analytic category, this paper compares the effects of generational status on earnings among men of Chinese, Filipinos, and Korean descents in the New York metropolitan area. Our analyses of the 5 percent Public Use Microdata Sample data of the 2000 U.S. census show that all other background characteristics held equal, 1.5-generation Chinese and Filipino American workers make significantly higher earnings than second-generation workers. However, Korean American workers do not exhibit this 1.5-generation advantage. These findings support a segmented assimilation theory, the view that immigrant assimilation paths are not uniform across ethnic groups or generation status. Other findings suggest that bilingual ability would increase earnings only for the Chinese group.”
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This paper evaluates the impact of migrant remittances on human capital accumulation among youth. An augmented human capital model with two outcomes, education attendance and education attainment, is estimated using a large nationally representative household survey from Jordan. Empirical results show that migrant remittance receipt has a positive effect on education attendance. This finding is obtained while controlling for other socio-economic determinants of schooling behavior and is robust to censorship and endogeneity bias. The results also indicate that the magnitude of the remittance impact on both education outcomes is larger for men compared with that of women.
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“This article addresses whether there is the beginning of a fifth wave of intercountry adoptions (ICAs) from Africa to the United States (U.S.). ICAs function as a “quiet migration” of children [Weil (1984)International Migration Review 18(2):276–293; Lovelock (2000)International Migration Review 34 (3):907–949; Selman (2002)Population Research and Policy Review 21:205–225]. U.S. Department of Justice Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) data from 1971 to 2009 indicate that there were 421,085 ICAs to the U.S. Tarmann (2003:2, http://www.prb.org/Articles/2003/InternationalAdoptionRateinUSDoubledinthe1990s.aspx?p=1) reported that in 2000, U.S. parents completed one ICA for every 200 births. In the past, top sending countries have followed flows from Europe, South America, and Asia. INS data are used to analyze the increase in the intercountry adoptees from Africa from 1996 to 2009. Similar Hague Convention data are used for the comparison of the number of ICAs from Africa to other top recipient nations. Demographic and economic data are used to support the suggestion that ICAs, similar to other migratory flows, are from developing to developed countries.”
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In recent decades, more countries have started to recognize dual citizenship. Although overlooked in the literature, Africa is part of this trend with more than half of its governments now permitting their nationals to naturalize elsewhere while retaining home country rights. Why have some African countries embraced dual citizenship for emigrants, while others have not? We examine demographic, political, and economic data broadly across the continent and identify few clear patterns. We then explore the cases of Senegal, Ghana, and Kenya, finding that dual citizenship policies are driven as much by politics as they are by economic or security concerns.
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Migration data can be divided into two broad types: “stock” or census and survey data and “flow” or administrative data. Both stock and flow data are valuable resources for analyzing the migration process. In the statistical system of the United States, the U.S. Census Bureau is the primary source for census and survey data on the foreign born. The Department of Homeland Security and the U.S. State Department provide several different administrative sources for studying immigration. The goal of this study is to review the best sources of government data available for analyzing (1) the size, distribution, and characteristics of the foreign-born population and their households and (2) the level of immigration into the United States, and the distribution and characteristics of immigrants by status.
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Families immigrating to Australia face many challenges integrating into the educational system, including language barriers and interrupted schooling. We have qualitatively evaluated the educational concerns of Arabic migrants from Sudan and Iraq to Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, a city that receives a high percentage of Australia’s immigrants. Using an interactive paradigm incorporating focus group discussions for thematic analysis, we concluded that the parents’ frame of reference for education was a more didactic style of learning. Parents viewed education as an essential part of the way forward for their children in Australia. However, it was stressful for them to try to cope with a new host nation’s expectation of their involvement in their children’s education while at the same time dealing with a language barrier. Professionals should look to empower parents with structural information about the key elements of the educational curriculum with minimal reliance on written technical language and match their expectations of parental involvement to the situation of the parents.
SOURCE: W.J. Sainsbury, A.M.N. Renzaho, Educational concerns of Arabic speaking migrants from Sudan and Iraq to Melbourne: Expectations on migrant parents in Australia, International Journal of Educational Research (2011), doi:10.1016/j.ijer.2011.10.001
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Understanding the selves, situations and actions of Africans can never be comprehended outside kinship. Local and foreign worldviews are first pigeonholed into culture and defined within kinship realities in Nigeria and Africa. There have been studies on kinship in Africa. However, the findings from such studies portrayed the immutability of African kinship. Thus, as an important contribution to the on-going engagement of kinship in the twenty-first century as an interface between the contemporary Diaspora, this article engaged kinship within international migration. This is a major behavioural and socio-economic force in Nigeria. Methodological triangulation was adopted as part of the research design and primary data were collected through in-depth interviews (IDIs), and life histories of international migrants were documented and focus group discussions (FGDs) were held with kin of returnees. The article found and concluded that while returnees continued to appreciate local kinship infrastructures, the infrastructures were liable to reconstruction primarily determined by dominant support situations in the traditional African kinship networks.
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ABSTRACT – Background and Objectives: This study investigated the mental health status of young girls after genital mutilation in Northern Iraq. Although experts assume that circumcised girls are more prone to psychiatric illnesses than non-circumcised girls, little research has been conducted to confirm this claim. For the purpose of this study, it was assumed that female genital
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Although democratization is desirable, the reframing of ethnic identity, witnessed for example in the peace campaigns of South Africa and Rwanda, raises two questions: First, there is an empirical question: can ethnic identities actually be modified? Second, there is a normative question: should ‘problematic’ elements of ethnic identities be modified? This article is divided into three sections. In the first section, I demonstrate that each of these questions provokes, and indeed merits, debate. In the second section, I argue that in each case these debates are the result of an incoherent response to the complications of identity politics. Thus to address these debates, I first develop a theory of how to manage the machinations of social and ethnic group identities: the recognition–redistribution–participation theory, inspired by the work of Nancy Fraser, which comprises a two-dimensional conception of justice and accompanying norm of equality of participation opportunity. I then in my final section proceed to show that the debates that develop from efforts to desecuritize ethnic relations can be resolved by applying this theory.
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E.U. Accountability to International Law : The Case of Asylum
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Subsidiary Protection and the Function of Article 15(c) of the Qualification Directive
The United States’ system of refugee protection, long a source of national pride and a symbol of United States’ openness to the world’s dispossessed, remains generous in many respects. This system – which encompasses refugees, asylum-seekers, and populations in need of short-term protection – has ambitious goals and diverse responsibilities. It seeks to enable those fleeing persecution to reach protection, while preventing terrorist and criminal infiltration; to identify and admit vulnerable refugees, and to promote their successful integration; to screen out fraudulent political asylum claims, but to ensure that bona fide asylum-seekers can apply for and, if eligible, secure asylum; and to weigh endless requests for temporary protection from groups and individuals. Over the past 20 years, particularly since the 9/11 terrorist attacks, security and enforcement concerns have driven United States’ refugee developments and protection policies have not kept pace. The present article details the increased difficulties bona fide refugees and asylum-seekers face in trying to reach and to gain protection in the United States. It also describes the paucity of legal tools available to admit and to provide temporary status in the United States on humanitarian grounds. It argues that the United States’ system of refugee protection needs policy attention and revitalisation.
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The United States’ system of refugee protection, long a source of national pride and a symbol of United States’ openness to the world’s dispossessed, remains generous in many respects. This system – which encompasses refugees, asylum-seekers, and populations in need of short-term protection – has ambitious goals and diverse responsibilities. It seeks to enable those fleeing persecution to reach protection, while preventing terrorist and criminal infiltration; to identify and admit vulnerable refugees, and to promote their successful integration; to screen out fraudulent political asylum claims, but to ensure that bona fide asylum-seekers can apply for and, if eligible, secure asylum; and to weigh endless requests for temporary protection from groups and individuals. Over the past 20 years, particularly since the 9/11 terrorist attacks, security and enforcement concerns have driven United States’ refugee developments and protection policies have not kept pace. The present article details the increased difficulties bona fide refugees and asylum-seekers face in trying to reach and to gain protection in the United States. It also describes the paucity of legal tools available to admit and to provide temporary status in the United States on humanitarian grounds. It argues that the United States’ system of refugee protection needs policy attention and revitalisation.
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Struggle for Recognition: Bosnian Refugees’ Employment Experiences in Sweden
This article presents the personal experiences of refugees from Bosnia-Herzegovina related to their employment in Sweden. It is based on 35 interviews conducted in 2009 with asylum claimants and resettled refugees who came to Sweden in the early 1990s, aiming at their own perceptions and subjective assessments of their employment paths. The variety of experiences within each of these two groups suggests that individual employment paths can neither be fully explained by the admission category, nor in terms of the type of education, age, or gender. Although they admit the importance of these factors, the interviewees perceive chance as a decisive issue with regard to their initial access to the labour market, and its strong impact on their further success. They see official channels of professional recognition as far less functional than informal paths leading into the labour market that depend on personal encounters and connections. Against the background of laws and policies, personally experienced employment integration is revealed as a chance-ridden individual process.
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This article presents the personal experiences of refugees from Bosnia-Herzegovina related to their employment in Sweden. It is based on 35 interviews conducted in 2009 with asylum claimants and resettled refugees who came to Sweden in the early 1990s, aiming at their own perceptions and subjective assessments of their employment paths. The variety of experiences within each of these two groups suggests that individual employment paths can neither be fully explained by the admission category, nor in terms of the type of education, age, or gender. Although they admit the importance of these factors, the interviewees perceive chance as a decisive issue with regard to their initial access to the labour market, and its strong impact on their further success. They see official channels of professional recognition as far less functional than informal paths leading into the labour market that depend on personal encounters and connections. Against the background of laws and policies, personally experienced employment integration is revealed as a chance-ridden individual process.
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Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health, Online First™ – SpringerLink
The purpose of this study was to explore the influence of macro-level factors on immigrant and non-immigrant women’s mental health status in a Canadian context. This study was part of a larger study examining women’s quality of life in south eastern Ontario. Using survey research methods, data were collected through face-to-face interviews with 91 women of whom 66 identified their country of origin as “other” than Canada. Descriptive, bivariate and regression analysis of this data revealed that immigrant and non-immigrant women’s macro-level predictors of mental health status vary. Overall, for immigrant women’s perceptions of neighbourhood social cohesion was a stronger predictor influencing mental health status, while for non-immigrant women social support was more influential. Research with larger, representative samples should explore the findings to ascertain generalizability.
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The purpose of this study was to explore the influence of macro-level factors on immigrant and non-immigrant women’s mental health status in a Canadian context. This study was part of a larger study examining women’s quality of life in south eastern Ontario. Using survey research methods, data were collected through face-to-face interviews with 91 women of whom 66 identified their country of origin as “other” than Canada. Descriptive, bivariate and regression analysis of this data revealed that immigrant and non-immigrant women’s macro-level predictors of mental health status vary. Overall, for immigrant women’s perceptions of neighbourhood social cohesion was a stronger predictor influencing mental health status, while for non-immigrant women social support was more influential. Research with larger, representative samples should explore the findings to ascertain generalizability.
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New Journal Articles- ScienceDirect.com - Journal of Aging Studies - Space, time, and self: Rethinking aging in the contexts of immigration and transnationalism Thursday, May 24, 2012"Critical gerontology views aging as a social construction that reflects the intersections of micro-processes with the macro-level forces of individual aging experiences. In the contexts of immigration and transnationalism, however, the macro-structural conditions, dynamics and experiences of aging have become further diversified and complicated. The de […]
- Empathy and Expertise: Case Workers and Immigration/Asylum Applicants in London - James - 2012 - Law & Social Inquiry - Wiley Online Library Wednesday, May 23, 2012"Under recent reforms, the UK government has eroded state funding for civil legal aid. Funding cuts affect asylum and immigration law as produced, practiced, and mediated in the course of interactions between case workers and their clients in legal-aid-funded Law Centers in South London. The article explores the contradictory character of one-on-one rel […]
- Treatment for childhood refugee trauma: A randomized, controlled trial. | information for practice Wednesday, May 23, 2012"The authors investigated the effectiveness of child-centered play therapy (CCPT) in comparison with an evidence-based intervention, trauma-focused cognitive–behavioral therapy (TF-CBT) with traumatized refugee children aged 6 to 13. Thirty-one traumatized refugee children were randomly assigned to participate in CCPT or TF-CBT in the elementary school […]
- Taylor & Francis Online :: Rwanda's first refugees: Tutsi exile and international response 1959–64 - Journal of Eastern African Studies - Volume 6, Issue 2 Wednesday, May 23, 2012"By the time Rwanda gained independence from Belgium in 1962, 200,000 Rwandan Tutsi had left to seek exile in neighbouring states. Drawing on British archives, this article traces international responses to this refugee crisis in Uganda, arguing that the political subtleties of this displacement are often overlooked. British officials' anxious resp […]
- Taylor & Francis Online :: Do no harm: assessing a military approach to the Lord's Resistance Army - Journal of Eastern African Studies - Volume 6, Issue 2 Wednesday, May 23, 2012"In October 2011 the US announced the deployment of 100 special force troops to assist the Ugandan army against the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA). For several years the originally northern Ugandan rebel group has been active in neighboring Democratic Republic of the Congo, Central African Republic and South Sudan. The announcement generated mixed re […]
- Discovering Immigration into Turkey: The Emergence of a Dynamic Field - Tolay - 2012 - International Migration - Wiley Online Library Wednesday, May 23, 2012"In the last couple of decades, Turkey has become an important country of immigration. In parallel, a new scholarly field has developed to study this largely unrecognized phenomenon. In this paper, I take stock of this new literature. I first show how students of immigration into Turkey had to define the field in relation to the powerful existing fields […]
- How Responsive are Remittances to Recipients’ Welfare? Evidence from Fiji - Jimenez - 2012 - International Migration - Wiley Online Library Wednesday, May 23, 2012"Using data from a customized household survey in Fiji, we assess the extent to which remittances are motivated by the migrants’ commitment to provide social protection to their families back home. We test this hypothesis by estimating econometrically the responsiveness of migrants’ remittances to the perceived financial need of recipients. We extend a […]
- Crossing Boundaries: Internal, Regional and International Migration in Cameroon - Mberu - 2012 - International Migration - Wiley Online Library Wednesday, May 23, 2012"Internal and international migration increasingly continues to be of global importance for development policies and programmes, but the dearth of data on migration for African countries and the limited focus on the structural conditions that motivate migration from specific localities within the region remain glaring. In this study, we examine the patt […]
- Immigrant Fertility: A Comparative Study between Italy and Russia - Mussino - 2012 - International Migration - Wiley Online Library Wednesday, May 23, 2012"In this paper, we contribute to the analysis of fertility differentials between female migrants and the native-born by examining the transition to first child using event history analysis. We use event history as a quantitative translation of the life-course approach. The data examined are the Italian Families and Social Subjects (FSS) survey, conducte […]
- Household Migration, Remittances and Their Impact on Health in Indonesia - Lu - 2012 - International Migration - Wiley Online Library Wednesday, May 23, 2012"The growing flow of migrants’ remittances has generated much interest in understanding the socio-economic consequences of household migration for individuals and families in migrant-sending areas. In this paper, I examine the effect of household migration on health status, as measured by nutritional status, of adults who have remained behind in rural I […]
- ScienceDirect.com - Journal of Aging Studies - Space, time, and self: Rethinking aging in the contexts of immigration and transnationalism Thursday, May 24, 2012
Archive Items Received- Immigration law [2011 ed.].. Saturday, April 30, 2011By Kevin Browne.refugee_archives
- Go home or die here : violence, xenophobia and the reinvention of difference in South Africa Saturday, April 30, 2011By Shireen Hassim; Tawana Kupe; and Eric Worbyrefugee_archives
- Fighting for Darfur : public action and the struggle to stop the genocide Saturday, April 30, 2011By Rebecca Hamilton 1977-refugee_archives
- Core documents on European and international human rights Saturday, April 30, 2011Compiled by Rhona K. M. Smithrefugee_archives
- Add to e-Shelf A child from everywhere : photographs and interviews of children from 185 countries living in the UK Saturday, April 30, 2011By Caroline Irbyrefugee_archives
- Managing the undesirables : refugee camps and humanitarian government Saturday, April 30, 2011By Michel Agier 1953-refugee_archives
- Cultures in contact : world migrations in the second millennium Saturday, April 30, 2011By Dirk Hoerderrefugee_archives
- Exiles from european revolutions refugees : refugees in mid-Victorian England Saturday, April 30, 2011Proceedings of Conference : Flotsam of Revolution (1999 : London, England)refugee_archives
- Still targeted : continued persecution of Iraq's minorities Saturday, April 30, 2011By Mumtaz Lalani for Minority Rights Group International.refugee_archives
- Rights displaced : forced returns of Roma, Ashkali and Egyptians from Western Europe to Kosovo Thursday, February 3, 2011Refugees -- Kosovo (Republic)refugee_archives
- Immigration law [2011 ed.].. Saturday, April 30, 2011
Archive Items Ordered- Immigration law [2011 ed.].. Saturday, April 30, 2011By Kevin Browne.refugee_archives
- Go home or die here : violence, xenophobia and the reinvention of difference in South Africa Saturday, April 30, 2011By Shireen Hassim; Tawana Kupe; and Eric Worbyrefugee_archives
- Fighting for Darfur : public action and the struggle to stop the genocide Saturday, April 30, 2011By Rebecca Hamilton 1977-refugee_archives
- Core documents on European and international human rights Saturday, April 30, 2011Compiled by Rhona K. M. Smithrefugee_archives
- Add to e-Shelf A child from everywhere : photographs and interviews of children from 185 countries living in the UK Saturday, April 30, 2011By Caroline Irbyrefugee_archives
- Managing the undesirables : refugee camps and humanitarian government Saturday, April 30, 2011By Michel Agier 1953-refugee_archives
- Add to e-Shelf States in conflict with their minorities : challenges to minority rights in South Asia Saturday, April 30, 2011By Rita Manchandarefugee_archives
- Cultures in contact : world migrations in the second millennium Saturday, April 30, 2011By Dirk Hoerderrefugee_archives
- Exiles from european revolutions refugees : refugees in mid-Victorian England Saturday, April 30, 2011Proceedings of Conference : Flotsam of Revolution (1999 : London, England)refugee_archives
- Still targeted : continued persecution of Iraq's minorities Saturday, April 30, 2011By Mumtaz Lalani for Minority Rights Group International.refugee_archives
- Immigration law [2011 ed.].. Saturday, April 30, 2011
Library Items Received- Ethnic conflict : causes, consequences, responses Saturday, April 30, 2011By Karl Cordell 1956-, and Stefan Wolff 1969-refugee_archives
- Doing research with refugees : issues and guidelines Saturday, April 30, 2011By Rhetta Moran and Bogusia Templerefugee_archives
- New European identity and citizenship Saturday, April 30, 2011By Remy Leveau and Khadija Mohsen-Finanrefugee_archives
- Ethnicity and race : making identities in a changing world Monday, April 18, 2011Racerefugee_archives
- The sociology of war and violence Monday, April 18, 2011War and societyrefugee_archives
- Citizenship, identity and immigration in the European Union: between past and future. Monday, April 18, 2011 refugee_archives
- Trauma, Media, Art: New Perspectives. Friday, November 19, 2010 refugee_archives
- Conservation and mobile indigenous peoples : displacement, forced settlement, and sustainable development Monday, February 14, 2011Nature -- Effect of human beings on -- Congressesrefugee_archives
- Refugees and development in Africa Monday, April 18, 2011Dveloppement conomique -- Aspect social -- Congrsrefugee_archives
- The collective responsibility of states to protect refugees Monday, April 18, 2011Refugees -- Legal status, laws, etcrefugee_archives
- Ethnic conflict : causes, consequences, responses Saturday, April 30, 2011
Library Items Ordered- Ethnic conflict : causes, consequences, responses Saturday, April 30, 2011By Karl Cordell 1956-, and Stefan Wolff 1969-refugee_archives
- Doing research with refugees : issues and guidelines Saturday, April 30, 2011By Rhetta Moran and Bogusia Templerefugee_archives
- New European identity and citizenship Saturday, April 30, 2011By Remy Leveau and Khadija Mohsen-Finanrefugee_archives
- Religion, culture and the state : reflections on the Bouchard-Taylor report Monday, April 18, 2011 refugee_archives
- The ethics of migration research methodology : dealing with vulnerable immigrants Tuesday, March 15, 2011Alien criminals -- Researchrefugee_archives
- Doing research with refugees : issues and guidelines Tuesday, March 15, 2011Refugees -- Services for -- Researchrefugee_archives
- Ethnicity and race : making identities in a changing world Monday, April 18, 2011Racerefugee_archives
- The sociology of war and violence Monday, April 18, 2011War and societyrefugee_archives
- Gendering the international asylum and refugee debate Tuesday, March 15, 2011Women refugees -- Social conditionsrefugee_archives
- Citizenship, identity and immigration in the European Union: between past and future. Monday, April 18, 2011 refugee_archives
- Ethnic conflict : causes, consequences, responses Saturday, April 30, 2011
Archives Watch Blog Postings- News: Tunisia and the Archives of the Secret Police Saturday, January 7, 2012 Refugee Archives at UEL
- News: Seoul Opens North Korea Human Rights Documentation Center and Archive Saturday, January 7, 2012 Refugee Archives at UEL
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- News: Digital archive of Guatemala’s police force launched at conference Thursday, January 5, 2012 Refugee Archives at UEL
- ICA December Human Rights Working Group News Thursday, January 5, 2012 Refugee Archives at UEL
- News : Rwanda – The Audio-Visual Record of a Brutalized Nation Monday, October 17, 2011 Refugee Archives at UEL
- News : Mia Farrow Documents Darfuri Culture; Donates Work to UConn Monday, October 17, 2011 Refugee Archives at UEL
- News : Archives After Conflict in Guatemala, Sierra Leone and South Africa – A Wilson Center Video Monday, October 17, 2011 Refugee Archives at UEL
- News: Sada Mire – Uncovering Somalia’s Heritage Monday, October 17, 2011 Refugee Archives at UEL
- News : Tunisians discover secret archive in Paris Monday, October 17, 2011 Refugee Archives at UEL
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