A number of migration scholars suggest that domestic courts have become the key protective institution for refugees. How can we explain this claim? One prominent explanation identifies group litigation as the key source of the increasing influence of the courts. How well does this explanation travel empirically? The article evaluates this explanation by examining the puzzling behaviour of German refugee NGOs. They have not entered the legal arena directly (either as parties or as interveners), nor have they concentrated on developing extensive litigation campaigns. Still, they are remarkably ‘judicialized’: their frequent engagement with the law in other respects has heightened their legal consciousness. Why have German refugee NGOs made su...
Tensions are high in member states of the European Union as they struggle to accommodate a record nu...
A high number of legal changes accompanied the increase of people seeking asylum in Germany througho...
Special Issue on 'Migrants and the law : what European Courts say?'The context in which European and...
I will look at how the United Kingdom has attempted to handle its own obligations under the Refugee ...
This article focuses on the gradual expansion of docket control mechanisms in refugee (or asylum) la...
This Article analyzes how refugee lawyers in the United Kingdom navigate the tension between state p...
A rise in anti-immigrant pressure can reduce asylum recognition rates, irrespective of individuals’ ...
This Article analyzes how refugee lawyers in the United Kingdom navigate the tension between state p...
This article pursues to clarify the crucial contribution of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights...
In a document released during the summer of 1998, the Austrian Presidency of the European Union form...
This Article examines the evolution of the nexus requirement in United States refugee law since the ...
This Article argues that the current approaches to asylum claims based on social group membership ...
U.S. asylum law is based on a domestic statute that incorporates an international treaty, the U.N. P...
There being no International Refugee Court, one way that the international protection of refugees de...
This article supports a new theoretical approach to the utilization of human rights treaties in refu...
Tensions are high in member states of the European Union as they struggle to accommodate a record nu...
A high number of legal changes accompanied the increase of people seeking asylum in Germany througho...
Special Issue on 'Migrants and the law : what European Courts say?'The context in which European and...
I will look at how the United Kingdom has attempted to handle its own obligations under the Refugee ...
This article focuses on the gradual expansion of docket control mechanisms in refugee (or asylum) la...
This Article analyzes how refugee lawyers in the United Kingdom navigate the tension between state p...
A rise in anti-immigrant pressure can reduce asylum recognition rates, irrespective of individuals’ ...
This Article analyzes how refugee lawyers in the United Kingdom navigate the tension between state p...
This article pursues to clarify the crucial contribution of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights...
In a document released during the summer of 1998, the Austrian Presidency of the European Union form...
This Article examines the evolution of the nexus requirement in United States refugee law since the ...
This Article argues that the current approaches to asylum claims based on social group membership ...
U.S. asylum law is based on a domestic statute that incorporates an international treaty, the U.N. P...
There being no International Refugee Court, one way that the international protection of refugees de...
This article supports a new theoretical approach to the utilization of human rights treaties in refu...
Tensions are high in member states of the European Union as they struggle to accommodate a record nu...
A high number of legal changes accompanied the increase of people seeking asylum in Germany througho...
Special Issue on 'Migrants and the law : what European Courts say?'The context in which European and...