The yardstick set by the EU to enact ‘fair, humane and effective returns’ includes the very basic human rights to health and life. States have an obligation to ensure that the human rights of all are safeguarded – and justifiably it is expected that in state-organised activities this standard is meticulously upheld. But is it at all possible for a state to claim that it is safeguarding deportees’ human rights? In an attempt to answer this question, this post explores migrants’ experiences of the first stage of the deportation process in Sweden in terms of their psychosocial wellbeing and human rights
Human rights for refugees has proven to be incredibly hard to protect. The problem lies with the fac...
peer reviewedAlthough the treatment of aliens by state authorities has been consistently under the s...
Deportation due to criminal activity is often viewed as a neutral administrative practice and has to...
The yardstick set by the EU to enact ‘fair, humane and effective returns’ includes the very basic hu...
This chapter critically analyses the official discourse of protection of migrants’ psychosocial well...
By analysing migrant experiences of living in Sweden under the threat of deportation, this book cont...
This chapter critically analyses the official discourse of protection of migrants’ psychosocial well...
The pressure on EU countries to increase migrant returns has been incessant. The first milestone in ...
First published online: 27 May 2021In Justice for People on the Move, Gillian Brock constructs an el...
The struggles of people who sought to enter and move across Europe became increasingly intense in 20...
Using the events in Sweden in the autumn of 2015 as a practical example, this paper examines the que...
Sweden is generally considered to have high standards of immigrant detention. However, a recent stud...
This Article examines the European Court of Human Rights\u27 intervention in the detention of involu...
This is a qualitative research study utilising a theoretical framework of democracy theory, human ri...
Human rights for refugees has proven to be incredibly hard to protect. The problem lies with the fac...
peer reviewedAlthough the treatment of aliens by state authorities has been consistently under the s...
Deportation due to criminal activity is often viewed as a neutral administrative practice and has to...
The yardstick set by the EU to enact ‘fair, humane and effective returns’ includes the very basic hu...
This chapter critically analyses the official discourse of protection of migrants’ psychosocial well...
By analysing migrant experiences of living in Sweden under the threat of deportation, this book cont...
This chapter critically analyses the official discourse of protection of migrants’ psychosocial well...
The pressure on EU countries to increase migrant returns has been incessant. The first milestone in ...
First published online: 27 May 2021In Justice for People on the Move, Gillian Brock constructs an el...
The struggles of people who sought to enter and move across Europe became increasingly intense in 20...
Using the events in Sweden in the autumn of 2015 as a practical example, this paper examines the que...
Sweden is generally considered to have high standards of immigrant detention. However, a recent stud...
This Article examines the European Court of Human Rights\u27 intervention in the detention of involu...
This is a qualitative research study utilising a theoretical framework of democracy theory, human ri...
Human rights for refugees has proven to be incredibly hard to protect. The problem lies with the fac...
peer reviewedAlthough the treatment of aliens by state authorities has been consistently under the s...
Deportation due to criminal activity is often viewed as a neutral administrative practice and has to...