Publications on Climate, Environment Displacement and Protection

Changing Climate, Changing Disasters: Pathways to Integration (Christian Aid et al., Jan. 2012) [textvia ReliefWeb] – See also related policy brief.

(Source: Forced Migration Current Awareness Blog).

“Climate Change and Conflict,” Special Issue of Journal of Peace Research, vol. 49, no. 1 (Jan. 2012) [contents](Source: Forced Migration Current Awareness Blog).
Climate Conversations: Questioning the Conflict Link (AlertNet, Jan. 2012) [text]
(Source: Forced Migration Current Awareness Blog).

Climate Refugees, Refugees or Under Own Protection?: A Comparative Study between Climate Refugees and Refugees Embraced by the United Nations Refugee Convention, Undergraduate thesis submitted to the Faculty of Social and Life Sciences (Karlstad University, 2011) [text]
(Source: Forced Migration Current Awareness Blog).

Coping with Climate Change (IRIN, Jan. 2012) [text]
(Source: Forced Migration Current Awareness Blog).

“Critical Approaches to Environmental Displacement,” RSC Seminar Series 2012  Podcast [access]
(Source: Forced Migration Current Awareness Blog).

“Language Analysis in the United Kingdom’s Refugee Status Determination System: Seeing through Policy Claims about ‘Expert Knowledge’,” Ethnic and Racial Studies, Forthcoming Article, 3 Jan. 2012 [free full-text]

– See also related comment.
(Source: Forced Migration Current Awareness Blog).

“Moving the Virtual Border to the Cellular Level: Mandatory DNA Testing and the U.S. Refugee Family Reunification Program,” California Law Review, vol. 99, no. 6 (Dec. 2011) [full-text]
(Source: Forced Migration Current Awareness Blog).

“Observations on EXCOM’s 60th Session (2009): Does UNHCR Need (More) EXCOM Conclusions?,” Refuge, vol. 27, no. 2 (2010) [full-text]
(Source: Forced Migration Current Awareness Blog).

Refugee Protection and International Migration: Achievements, Challenges and Lessons Learned from UNHCR’s 10-Point Plan Project (UNHCR, Jan. 2012) [text]
(Source: Forced Migration Current Awareness Blog).

They’re Not ‘Economic Migrants: Why Refugees and Asylum-seekers Have the Right to Work (Refugees and the Right to Work, Jan. 2012) [text]
(Source: Forced Migration Current Awareness Blog).

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