Daily Archives: Wednesday, June 27, 2012

New Pub: No way out, no way in: Irregular migrant children and families in the UK

From the Press Release:

No Way Out, No Way In: Migrant children fall through the net

No Way Out, No Way In

No Way Out, No Way In

An estimated 120,000 children living in the UK without legal immigration status are at risk of destitution, exploitation and social exclusion because of contradictory and frequently changing rules and regulations which jeopardise their access to healthcare, education, protection by the police and other public services, a new report published today by the University of Oxford shows.

The report “No Way Out, No Way In: Irregular migrant children and families in the UK” is published by the ESRC Centre on Migration Policy and Society (COMPAS) at the University of Oxford. It shows that irregular migrant children – more than half of whom were born in the UK and have lived here their entire lives – are being trapped between laws protecting children and the enforcement of migration control.

Dr Nando Sigona, the report’s main author, said: “Current immigration policy seems to override the concern for children’s rights. Nobody, not the public, nor the children or their families, benefits from this”.

Both international and British laws guarantee children access to education and healthcare, irrespective of their immigration status, and oblige public authorities to work in the children’s best interests. But increased demands on public authorities by the UK Border Agency – such as asking social services to report suspected irregular migrants – are pushing families and children away from essential services, leaving them more vulnerable and isolated. This can also mean that children and their families who are victims of serious crime may be afraid to report it to police because of their fears about their immigration status.

Frontline professionals like GPs and teachers are increasingly being asked to check the legal status of children in their care. Not having legal status can mean the children either don’t go to school or can’t participate fully. It also means they may not be able to register with a GP or that pregnant mothers who lack legal status may avoid antenatal and postnatal care because of for fear of being reported to UKBA.

Dr Paramjit Gill of The Royal College of General Practitioners stated: “Having a large group of young people without access to healthcare has significant public health implications such as missing out on routine immunisation and screening programmes”.

Dr Sigona said: “The point of the report is to identify the situation that these children are in, and the difficulties that this places on the public service providers with whom they come into contact. Teachers, GPs and social workers should be allowed to do their jobs without having to act as de facto immigration control officers”.

Through a vivid portrait of children’s everyday lives, the report shows the profound extent to which the immigration system can affect the health and educational achievements of irregular migrant children from an early age, and seeks to contribute to the policy debate on how to reconcile the protection of children’s rights and migration control for the benefit of both the children and British society more broadly.

Ilona Pinter, Policy Advisor on Young Refugees and Migrants, The Children’s Society said: “This research shows the harsh reality facing tens of thousands of undocumented migrant children across the UK. Denying families access to support and vital services is leaving

children hungry, homeless and destitute. Regardless of their immigration status, the government has a responsibility to protect all children in the UK”.

Finally, considering that children who were born or spent most of their childhood in the UK are unlikely to be deported and the potential negative impacts on British society of a long term excluded population, the report recommends policy makers to provide effective pathways for irregular migrant children to regularise their legal status.

About the report

The study was carried out by a research team at the ESRC Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS). It was funded by the Barrow Cadbury Trust and was part of a comparative research project in collaboration with the Institute for the Study of International Migration (ISIM) at Georgetown University (USA). The research team conducted their qualitative study over two years, interviewing 49 irregular migrant families from Jamaica, Afghanistan, China, Brazil, Nigeria and ethnic Kurds reaching in total over hundred minors, and carrying out 30 interviews with public service providers (teachers and GPs), local authorities, policy makers and support organisations.

About the authors of the report

Dr Nando Sigona, the main author of the study, is Research Associate at the ESRC Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS) and Senior Research Officer at the Refugee Studies Centre, both at the University of Oxford. His main research interests include: irregular and child migration, asylum in the EU, Roma politics and anti-Gypsyism in Europe, and the relationship between migration, citizenship and belonging.

Vanessa Hughes is Research Assistant at the ESRC Centre on Migration, Policy and Society where she contributes on a number of research activities and projects on irregular and child migration, migrant integration in the EU, citizenship, and urban change.

Please feel free to circulate the report as widely as you see fit. The report is available on the project blog 
http://irregularvoices.wordpress.com
 and at 
http://www.compas.ox.ac.uk/research/welfare/undocumented-migrant-children-in-the-uk/

 

New Publications from the Minority Rights Group

In the June 2012 edition of the  Minority Rights Group International (MRG) email bulletin, details of the following publications were announced:

Publications

Minority Rights Group International is launching its acclaimed annual report, State of the World’s Minorities and Indigenous Peopleson the 28 June. The theme for 2012 focuses on how minorities and indigenous communities around the world are being affected by natural resource development. The report provides concrete evidence of how the generation of vast revenues from logging and dams, oil and mineral extraction, coastal tourism, fish farming, conservation parks and large-scaleagriculture, is often at the expense of the rights of indigenous peoples and minorities.
State of the World’s Minorities and Indigenous Peoples is the only annual
publication that puts the situation of minority communities firmly in the
context of global events. It includes a regional overview – focusing on
events affecting minorities in the Americas, Asia and the Pacific, Europe and
the Middle East – and thematic chapters looking at issues such as Corporate
Social Responsibility and indigenous women’s’ land rights.

The book will be available for download on MRG’s website <
http://www.minorityrights.org
>  on 28 June. For more information and for

details of report launches in London, Nairobi and Bangkok, contact
emma.eastwood@mrgmail.org.

New

MRG’s report – Iraq’s Minorities: Participation in Public Life – is nowavailable in Arabic:

First published in November 2011, this report examines the ongoing threats of violence and intimidation against minorities, and the
obstacles they face in accessing rights and services.

For news of these, and all of MRG’s publications, please visit our website. You can also subscribe to MRG’s publications.

 

Crimes Against Humanity Exhibition at the Imperial War Museum

Crimes Against Humanity

Details taken from the Imperial War Museum website at:  
http://www.iwm.org.uk/exhibitions/iwm-london/crimes-against-humanity

Genocide and ethnic conflict have occurred many times in the last hundred years -often under the cover of war.  Crimes Against Humanity looks at these events and at the challenges involved in trying to prevent them.

The exhibition examines some of the common features shared by the bloodshed in Armenia, Nazi-occupied Europe, Cambodia, East Timor, Bosnia, Rwanda and elsewhere. A specially commissioned 30-minute film is at the heart of the exhibition. Using the words of well-known commentators including broadcaster Fergal Keane, African affairs expert Alison des Forges, war correspondent Martin Bell and international jurist Richard Goldstone, it explores how groups of people are ostracised by societies, the role of mass propaganda and international involvement and justice.

The 30-minute film shown in this gallery contains scenes which some may find distressing.

UNHCR Refworld Migration Special Feature

*** Apologies for Cross Posting ***

The Refworld team would like to draw your attention to a new Refworld “Special Feature”, on Migration, which has been launched this week. Special Features are thematic pages, or “mini portals”, that contain a selection of documents and weblinks on a specific theme.

The Migration Special Feature 
http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/migration.html
 contains key information and guidance on the intersection between refugee protection and international migration. It includes selected legal documents, caselaw, UNHCR and other policy documents and weblinks to relevant partner organizations. It also highlights key themes in this area, such as such as maritime protection and international cooperation and regional approaches.

The Refworld team will make every effort to expand the number of documents and update links as appropriate. For that purpose, Refworld users are invited to inform the Refworld-team of new or existing relevant documents on the topic for inclusion (if no copyright or other restrictions on re-publication are in place), at refworld@unhcr.org.

Previous alerts are available at 
http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/alerts.html
. Should you wish to discontinue receiving these notifications, please respond to this e-mail (refworld@unhcr.org).

List of New Publications from the Forced Migration Discussion List

For your reference, the Forced Migration Discussion List has received
announcements about the following new reports, publications and online
resources: (Source: Forced Migration Discussion List).

A Commentary on the May 2012 Democratic Republic of Congo Operational
Guidance Note (Still Human, Still Here, June 2012)

http://stillhumanstillhere.files.wordpress.com/2009/01/shsh-commentary-on-the-may-2012-drc-ogn.pdf

Cruelty and Denial: State Sponsored Torture in Ethiopia (Medicine for Peace,
June 2012)

http://www.medicineforpeace.org

Disasters, vol. 36, Suppl. 1 (July 2012)

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/disa.2012.36.issue-s1/issuetoc

- Focus is on “urban displacement.”

European Network on Statelessness

http://www.statelessness.eu/

Frozen Words: Memory and Sexual Violence amongst Sudanese Refugee Women in
Cairo, New Issues in Refugee Research, no. 240 (UNHCR, June 2012)

http://www.unhcr.org/4fdef5799.html

Global Report 2011 (UNHCR, June 2012)

http://www.unhcr.org/gr11/index.xml

Global Trends 2011: A Year of Crises (UNHCR, June 2012)

http://www.unhcr.org/4fd9e6266.html

Interim Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing the International Protection
Needs of  Asylum-Seekers from Côte d’Ivoire (UNHCR, June 2012)

http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/docid/4fa7c1c92.html

Internal Displacement in Africa: A Development Challenge (Internal
Displacement Monitoring Centre, June 2012)

http://www.internal-displacement.org/8025708F004CFA06/(httpPublications)/E00D

7371D9262111C1257A1B0030B2F4?OpenDocument

International Protection Considerations with regard to People Fleeing the
Syrian Arab Republic (UNHCR, June 2012)

http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/docid/4fd60deb2.html

Justice Matters in Africa (International Refugee Rights Initiative)

http://www.refugee-rights.org/blog/

- New blog.

Opening Doors: A Global Survey of NGO Attitudes Towards LGBTI Refugees &
Asylum Seekers (ORAM, June 2012)

http://www.oraminternational.org/images/stories/Publications/oram-opening-doors.pdf

A Pillar of Protection: Solidarity Resettlement for Refugees in Latin
America, New Issues in Refugee Research, no. 239 (UNHCR, June 2012)

http://www.unhcr.org/4fd5d9c79.html

The Right to Nationality and the Secession of South Sudan: A Commentary on
the Impact of the New Laws (OSIEA & AfriMAP, June 2012)

http://www.afrimap.org/Report/The+Right+to+Nationality+and+the+Secession+of+S

outh+Sudan%3A+A+Commentary+on+the+Impact+of+the+New+Laws

The Search: Protection Space in Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, The
Philippines and Cambodia in Practice (Jesuit Refugee Service, June 2012)

http://www.jrsap.org/news_detail?TN=NEWS-20120429110609

Voices of Myanmar Refugees (Damir Sagolj, June 2012)

http://damirsagolj.wordpress.com/2012/06/07/voices-of-myanmar-refugees-2/

- Includes link to additinal photo galleries.

New Publications on Egypt; the Arab Spring; Irregular Migrants in Cyprus; UNHCR Asylum Levels and Trends; Sudanese Refugee Womenv

Marginality and Exclusion in EgyptMarginality and Exclusion in Egypt.
A new book by Ray Bush and Habib Ayeb and published by Zed Books.
[Further Details]
(Source: Zed Books).

The Arab Spring: The End of Postcolonialism
A new book by Hamid Dabashi and published by Zed Books.
[Further Information]
(Source: Zed Books).

Cyprus: Punishment without a crime: Detention of migrants and asylum seekers in Cyprus.
By Amnesty International.

‘’Detention should not be a tool for regulating migration. Cypriot authorities are wilfully violating International and European Union law when they detain irregular migrants without examining alternative measures and demonstrating that their detention is indeed necessary,” said Jezerca Tigani, Europe and Central Asia Deputy Programme Director at Amnesty International.

[Download Full Report]
(Source: Amnesty International)

UNHCR Asylum Levels and Trends in Industrialized Countries: Statistical overview of asylum applications lodged in Europe and selected non-European countries.
Produced by the UNHCR.
[Download Full Report]
(Source: UNHCR).

Frozen words: memory and sexual violence amongst Sudanese refugee women in Cairo.
New Issues  in Refugee Research - Research Paper No. 240.
By  Ginger A. Johnson.
[Download Working Paper]
(Source: UNHCR)

Improvements in Estimating Migration: Intelligence Update 12-2012.
Produced by the Greater London Authority Intelligence Unit.
[Download Report]
(Source: The Daily Telegraph -Migrant population in some parts of England double previous estimate).

 

Life in limbo for UK’s irregular migrant children and families

Reblogged from Postcards from ...:

Click to visit the original post

The Obama administration’s recent decision to suspend deportations and grant renewable residence permits to young ‘illegal’ migrants brought up in the United States will benefit up to 800,000 young people. Meanwhile, the UK government offers no solution for its 120,000 irregular migrant children.

By Nando Sigona

Published on openDemocracy, 24 June 2012 (http://www.opendemocracy.net)

For over ten years, the US Congress has been pondering whether or not to pass a bill called the DREAM Act (Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors) to regularise the position of young undocumented migrants who were brought to the US at an early age.

Read more… 1,100 more words

New Pub: “Strategies to End Double Violence Against Undocumented Women Protecting Rights and Ensuring Justice”

Information from the Press Release:

“Strategies to End Double Violence Against Undocumented Women
Protecting Rights and Ensuring Justice

BRUSSELS, 21 June 2012

The Chair of the ‘Committee of the European Parliament on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality’, MEP Mr. Mikael Gustafsson (GUE/NGL) was joined by MEPs Ms. Sirpa Pietikäinen (EPP) and Ms. Jean Lambert (Greens/ EFA) to launch PICUM’s seminal report and addressing the need to improve access to justice for undocumented women in Europe.

Strategies to End Double Violence Against Undocumented Women - Protecting Rights and Ensuring Justice

Strategies to End Double Violence Against Undocumented Women – Protecting Rights and Ensuring Justice

Across the EU, undocumented women are turned away from women’s shelters and risk arrest or deportation if they contact the police. As one social worker in Belgium explained, “Undocumented women often stay in their situation of violence until they’re beaten to death because they don’t dare to go to the police or ask for help.”

To address this urgent situation, PICUM’s report provides an overview of the laws, practices and partnerships that respect rights and ensure justice for all women in Europe without discrimination. It shows what works, where, and how it came about.

Responding to the growing recognition to place women’s protection needs ahead of their migration status, PICUM shows how this can be done practically, coherently and in accordance with the duties of law enforcement, legislators, civil society, and policymakers.

The examples in this report are a testimony to the agency, capacity and impact of migrant women themselves in bringing about change. As one undocumented woman told PICUM, “We will continue to fight for our rights, for rights of all migrants; especially for those working hard in this country.” 

Read it, Learn from it, and Share it. 
Download now in EN FR ES

New Publications on the UKBA in Africa; Family Migration; South Kordofan; Migration; New Londoners

Humanitarian crisis in South Kordofan

Humanitarian crisis in South Kordofan

A Comparative inspection of the UK Border Agency visa sections in the Africa.
By John Vine, the Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration.

An inspection of the visa sections that process applications submitted in Africa compared the performance of the posts in Nairobi, Abuja, Pretoria and the UK Visa Section. The report revealed that previously inspected visa sections in Abuja and the UK Visa Section while showing some improvements still had significant room to improve further, particularly in regard to the quality of decision making.

[Download Full Report]
BBC New Story - UKBA staff ‘unfairly rejecting’ African visas, report finds
(Source:  Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration).

Government changes to the family migration rules.
A Migrants’ Rights Network  e-briefing.
[Download Briefing]
(Source: Migrants’ Rights Network).

Humanitarian crisis in South Kordofan: The need for a political solution.
HPG Briefing Notes, May 2012.
By the Humanitarian Practice Group.
[Download Briefing Note]
(Source:  Humanitarian Practice Group).

Trends and challenges in humanitarian civil-military coordination.
A new HPG Working Paper by Victoria Metcalfe, Simone Haysom and Stuart Gordon.
[Download Working Paper]
(Source:  Humanitarian Practice Group).

Migration and sustainable development.
By the  United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development.
[Download Full Report]
(Source: DocuBase

The New Londoners Refugee Week 2012 Supplement
Produced by the Migrants Resource Centre.
[Access]

New Publications on Demography; Urban Refugees; Displacement; Cambodia; UNHCR

Demographic futures

Demographic futures

Demographic futures: Addressing inequality and diversity among older people.
Report produced by the British Academy.

With constant discussion of how the UK population is ageing, many people have come to see older people as a burden on society. It is often assumed that the main option available to combat increasing pension and NHS costs is to raise the state pension age…

Through summarising the relevant evidence around such factors as life expectancy, fertility, migration and older people’s activity, this report demonstrates not only the huge diversity in terms of health and lifestyle that exists amongst those over 60, but also the many kinds of contributions this age group are making to society.
(Quoted in DocuBase.)

[Access]
(Source: DocuBase).

Navigating Nairobi : A review of the implementation of UNHCR’s urban refugee  policy in Kenya’s capital city.
By Elizabeth Campbell, Jeff Crisp, Esther Kiragu.
[Download Report]
(Source: ALNAP).

The neglected generation

The Neglected Generation

The neglected generation: the impact of displacement on older people
A new report by HelpAge and IDMC .

While older internally displaced persons (IDPs) experience similar insecurity, human rights violations and discrimination as the rest of the population, they also face additional challenges and risks related to their age. IDMC have been working with Helpage to shine the spotlight on the experience of displacement for older IDPs.

[Download Full Report]
(Source: Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre, IDMC).

Cambodia: Imprisoned for Speaking Out – Update on Phnom Penh’s Boeung Kak Lake.
By Amnesty International.
[Download Full Report]
Amnesty – Press Release.
(Source: Amnesty International

UNHCR Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing the International Protection Needs of Members of Religious Minorities from Pakistan.
Produced by UNHCR.
[Download Full Report]
(Source: UNHCR).

Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing the International Protection Needs of asylum-seekers from Iraq.
Produced by UNHCR.
[Download Full Report]
(Source: UNHCR).

Produced by UNHCR.
[Download Full Report]
(Source: UNHCR).

UNHCR Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing the International Protection Needs of Asylum-Seekers from Côte d’Ivoire.
Produced by UNHCR.
[Download Full Report]
(Source: UNHCR).

 

 

New Journal Table of Contents Published

The following journals have recently published new Table of Contents within the fields of refugee and forced migration studies.

Journal of Immigrant & Refugee StudiesThe Journal of Immigrant and Refugee Studies has published its latest Table of Contents for Volume 10, Issue 2, 2012.

 

Journal of Immigrant and Minority HealthThe Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health has also published its latest Table of Contents for Volume 14, Number 3 / June 2012.

The Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health also provides Advance Access to selected new articles, and further details can be be found here – [Advance Access].  A selection of Advance Access articles are highlighted below:

 

 

ToC: Refugee Survey Quarterly Table of Contents for June 2012; Vol. 31, No. 2

 

Refugee Survey Quarterly

Refugee Survey Quarterly

Oxford Journals have published the latest Table of Contents Alert for the Refugee Survey Quarterly journal for June 2012; Vol. 31, No. 2 .  Further details of the articles included are highlighted below:

Articles

Armed Conflict in Asylum Law: The “War-Flaw”

Hugo Storey
Refugee Survey Quarterly 2012 31: 1-32
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

Illegal Refugees: Competing Policy Ideas and the Rise of the Regime of
Deterrence in American Asylum Politics

Rebecca Hamlin
Refugee Survey Quarterly 2012 31: 33-53
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]
Unaccompanied Children Seeking Asylum in Sweden: Living Conditions from a
Child-Centred Perspective

Anna Lundberg and Lisa Dahlquist
Refugee Survey Quarterly 2012 31: 54-75
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

Asylum-Seekers’ Perspectives on Work and Proof of Identity: The Norwegian
Experience

Marko Valenta and Kristin Thorshaug
Refugee Survey Quarterly 2012 31: 76-97
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]

Notes and Comments

The Impact of Socially Ir/responsible Resettlement on the Livelihoods of
Internally Displaced Persons in Georgia

Nato Kurshitashvili
Refugee Survey Quarterly 2012 31: 98-118
[Abstract] [Full Text][PDF]

Refugee Archive: Off Air Recording Requests WB: 9 June 2012

The following off air recording requests were made for the Refugee Council Archive at UEL for the week beginning the 9 June, 2012. Details are as follows:

Monday 11 June

1900-2200: BBC4: A Tale of Two Cities.  VideoPlus: 2877985

Wednesday 13 June

2100-2200: BBC4: Turners Thames.  VideoPlus: 2811329

2100-2200: BBC2: (2/6) The Secret History of Our Streets.  (Part 2: Camberwell Grove).  Series recording.

2320-0020: BBC2: The Fish Market: Inside Billingsgate.  VideoPlus: 546110  (Just this episode).

Thursday 14 June

2100-2200: BBC4: The bridges that Built London with Dan Cruickshank.  VideoPlus: 2708801

2335-0005: ITV1 London: The Late Debate (BOA).  VideoPlus: 933199

Friday 15 June

 1930-1955: Channel 4: (8/8) Unreported World.  (Part 6 – Hondurous: the Lost Girls). Series recording.

2100-2200: BBC2: (4/8) The Great British Story: A People’s History.  (Part 4: The Great Rising).  Series recording.

New Publications on Displacement

South Sudan: New displacement adds to critical humanitarian situation in the country since independence.
Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre. (IDMC).
[Read the Overview (html / pdf)]
(Source: Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre)

Nigeria: Increasing violence continues to cause internal displacement
Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre. (IDMC).
[Read the Overview (html / pdf)]
(Source: Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre)

Uganda : Need to focus on returnees and remaining IDPs in transition to development
Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre. (IDMC).
Read the overview report on Uganda.
(Source: Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre)

Conflict-induced displacement in Uganda
Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre. (IDMC).
View our new situational map summarising Ugandan displacement.
(Source: Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre)

Translated workshop report: Iraqi Protracted Displacement | التَّهجير العراقي المُطوَّل: تقرير ورشة العمل

Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre. (IDMC).
This report provides a brief overview of the workshop organised by the RSC and IDMC on 22 March 2012. Read the workshop report in both English and Arabic.
(Source: Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre)

Americas account for 7% of natural hazard induced displacement
Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre, (IDMC).
Read the full report here 
Read the press release here
(Source: Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre)

14.9 million internally displaced by natural hazard-induced disasters

IDMC launched its latest report “Global estimates 2011: People displaced by natural hazard-induced disasters” at the Rio+20 conference in Brazil. The report finds that in 2011, 14.9 million people were internally displaced throughout the world due to natural disasters, mostly related to weather events such as floods and storms. 89% of the displacement occurred in Asia.
Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre. (IDMC).
Read the full report here 
Read the press release here
(Source: Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre)

 

New Advance Access JRS Articles Published

Journal of Refugee Studies

Journal of Refugee Studies

The following articles have just been published through the Journal of Refugee Studies Advance Access scheme.  According to the JRS website, “Advance Access articles are papers that have been copyedited and typeset but not yet paginated for inclusion in an issue of the journal. More information, including how to cite Advance Access papers, can be found on the Advance Access page.”

The latest articles include:

Articles


The Uneven Development of the International Refugee Regime in Postwar Asia: Evidence from China, Hong Kong and Indonesia

Glen Peterson
Journal of Refugee Studies 2012 published 26 June 2012, 10.1093/jrs/fes009
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  [Request Permissions]

Safeguarding a Child Perspective in Asylum Reception: Dilemmas of Children’s Case Workers in Sweden

Lisa Ottosson, Marita Eastmond, and Isabell Schierenbeck
Journal of Refugee Studies 2012 published 26 June 2012, 10.1093/jrs/fes024
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  [Request Permissions]

Migration, Sacrifice and the Crisis of Muslim Nationalism

Tahir Naqvi
Journal of Refugee Studies 2012 published 25 June 2012, 10.1093/jrs/fes026
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  [Request Permissions]

Sickness in the System of Long-term Immigration Detention

Melissa Bull, Emily Schindeler, David Berkman, and Janet Ransley
Journal of Refugee Studies 2012 published 22 June 2012, 10.1093/jrs/fes017
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  [Request Permissions]

‘Help the People to Help Themselves’: UNRRA Relief Workers and European Displaced Persons

Silvia Salvatici
Journal of Refugee Studies 2012 published 20 June 2012, 10.1093/jrs/fes019
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  [Request Permissions]

The Housing Resettlement Experience of Refugee Immigrants to Australia

James Forrest, Kerstin Hermes, Ron Johnston, and Michael Poulsen
Journal of Refugee Studies 2012 published 20 June 2012, 10.1093/jrs/fes020
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  [Request Permissions]

Entangled or ‘Extruded’ Histories? Displacement, National Refugees, and Repatriation after the Second World War

Pamela Ballinger
Journal of Refugee Studies 2012 published 20 June 2012, 10.1093/jrs/fes022
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]  [Request Permissions]