Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

forced migration

Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 - In search of fairness in responsibility sharing

The cycle of mutual mistrust between EU Member States that prevents solidarity can only be broken if responsibility is assessed fairly on the basis of objective indicators.
Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 - Volunteers and asylum seekers

People in communities where asylum seekers and refugees have appeared offered various forms of support to the new arrivals as states failed to provide even the essentials.
Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 - A welcoming policy in post-socialist East Germany

Apparently, East European countries are less willing to accept refugees than other European countries. Their experience of ethnic and cultural diversity is weak and a genuine welcome has still to be developed.
Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 - Migration terminology matters

Failure to employ correct terminology has consequences beyond semantics. More efforts are needed to educate people – especially those whose words are widely disseminated – in the correct use of migration-related terminology.
Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 - Separated and unaccompanied children in the EU

A growing body of EU law, policy and practical measures address the situation of separated and unaccompanied children who arrive in the EU.
Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 - Ukrainian asylum seekers and a Polish immigration paradox

The recognition rate for Ukrainian asylum seekers in Poland remains at an extremely low level, with the concept of ‘internal flight alternative’ serving as the legal basis for rejection of many asylum applications.
Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 - Removing ‘non-removables’

EU law and policy on non-removable irregular immigrants – such as unsuccessful asylum seekers who cannot be returned to their country of origin – have political and humanitarian consequences.
Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 - Europe, don’t copy Australia

Praise for Australia’s policy of turning away asylum seekers is misguided.
Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 - Europe and the future of international refugee policy

There is new thinking – that European leaders should embrace – on how to promote long-term responses to the Syrian refugee crisis that protect and uphold human dignity.
Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 - Choice and preference in a matching market for refugees

We propose a system that will at the same time give refugees choices and states control by ‘matching’ the preferences of each to the other’s.
Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 - Legal and practical issues raised by the movement of people across the Mediterranean

States must deal with each other on a basis of equity and equality, rather than outmoded and unrealistic expectations of sovereign entitlement
Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 - From Syria to Brazil

Precisely because of the difficulties Syrians face in entering the EU, Brazil has opened up to them.
Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 General - Economic reintegration of returnees in Liberia

Since the early 2000s, the United Nations Industrial Development Organization has been implementing economic recovery programmes for returnees in certain post-conflict countries.
Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 General - Thirty years of development-induced displacement in China

To accelerate the process of poverty reduction in its poorer regions, China decided in 2001 to implement a national programme of displacement of populations living in areas considered environmentally fragile.
Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 General - Refugee Status Determination in Albania

There are some shortcomings in Albania’s RSD despite the country’s efforts to develop its procedures in line with international standards.
Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 General - The face of refugees

Personal contact with refugees helps us not only to see the people behind the need but also to better understand the obstacles they face.
Destination: Europe (Forced Migration Review 51)

FMR 51 General - Challenges to the right to work in Ecuador

The right to work is important for refugees and asylum seekers – to support themselves, to facilitate local integration and to contribute to the host society. However, they often face obstacles in accessing work in host societies...
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

RSC Special Seminars: Historical cross-border relocations in the Pacific

Professor Jane McAdam focuses here on the relocation of the Banaban population from Ocean Island (previously one of the Gilbert & Ellice Islands, now Kiribati) to Rabi Island in Fiji after the Second World War.
Climate change and disasters (Forced Migration Review 49)

FMR 49 - From the Editors

An introductory note on FMR 49, 'Disasters and displacement in a changing climate', from the Editors.
Climate change and disasters (Forced Migration Review 49)

FMR 49 - Foreward

In order to make progress on disasters, climate change and human mobility, it is essential to bring together different strands of the discussion to develop a comprehensive response that also anticipates future challenges associated with climate change.

Pagination

  • First page
  • Previous page
  • …
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Current page 6
  • Page 7
  • Page 8
  • Page 9
  • Page 10
  • …
  • Next page
  • Last page

Footer

  • About
  • Accessibility
  • Contribute
  • Copyright
  • Contact
  • Privacy
'Oxford Podcasts' Twitter Account @oxfordpodcasts | MediaPub Publishing Portal for Oxford Podcast Contributors | Upcoming Talks in Oxford | © 2011-2022 The University of Oxford