How can international law protect both international security and the human rights of displaced people? Existing international law protects only displaced refugees: those who flee persecution on the basis of religion, race, nationality, or political opinion. This article argues that a new Displaced Persons Convention must be created to protect the human rights of the world’s other 35 million victims of civil conflict and climate change who do not meet this narrow definition. International Refugee Law must be preserved as it is because it enshrines critical protections for minority rights that must not be diluted. However, an additional instrument of international law is necessary to resolve an issue that is at once one of the greatest human...
As of June 2020, nearly 80 million people have been forcibly displaced from their homes, surpassing ...
© The several contributors, 2012. All rights reserved. This chapter discusses the conflict between h...
On April 5, 2019, PILR held their triennial symposium titled: Revisiting Human Rights: The Universal...
How can international law better protect both international security and the human rights of people ...
How does international law protect migrants? For the most part, it does not. Of the millions of peop...
The origins of refugee rights are closely intertwined with the emergence of the general system of in...
The following essay is excerpted from the Epilogue to The Rights of Refugees Under International Law...
States have been granting protection to individuals and groups fleeing persecution for centuries; ho...
The fact that war is the primary cause of people being uprooted prompts us to ask what protection th...
When the fledgling U.N. negotiated a treaty to protect refugees after the Second World War, member s...
The following essay is based on a similar discussion that appeared in World Refugee Survey 1996 (© 1...
International refugee law is in crisis. Even as armed conflict and human rights abuse continue to fo...
This book addresses the relationship between International Refugee Law and International Human Right...
Since the 1980s, an increasing number of people have crossed international borders outside of regula...
This article examines the plight of refugees and the international law that attempts to protect them...
As of June 2020, nearly 80 million people have been forcibly displaced from their homes, surpassing ...
© The several contributors, 2012. All rights reserved. This chapter discusses the conflict between h...
On April 5, 2019, PILR held their triennial symposium titled: Revisiting Human Rights: The Universal...
How can international law better protect both international security and the human rights of people ...
How does international law protect migrants? For the most part, it does not. Of the millions of peop...
The origins of refugee rights are closely intertwined with the emergence of the general system of in...
The following essay is excerpted from the Epilogue to The Rights of Refugees Under International Law...
States have been granting protection to individuals and groups fleeing persecution for centuries; ho...
The fact that war is the primary cause of people being uprooted prompts us to ask what protection th...
When the fledgling U.N. negotiated a treaty to protect refugees after the Second World War, member s...
The following essay is based on a similar discussion that appeared in World Refugee Survey 1996 (© 1...
International refugee law is in crisis. Even as armed conflict and human rights abuse continue to fo...
This book addresses the relationship between International Refugee Law and International Human Right...
Since the 1980s, an increasing number of people have crossed international borders outside of regula...
This article examines the plight of refugees and the international law that attempts to protect them...
As of June 2020, nearly 80 million people have been forcibly displaced from their homes, surpassing ...
© The several contributors, 2012. All rights reserved. This chapter discusses the conflict between h...
On April 5, 2019, PILR held their triennial symposium titled: Revisiting Human Rights: The Universal...