Every year, thousands of refugees and other migrants die trying to cross borders. The dangers are many. Migrants die from exhaustion crossing deserts, freeze on mountain passes, drown at sea. One way states can save lives is by undertaking rescue operations. This chapter asks whether receiving states have any special duty to do so. The idea of a ‘special duty’ here can be brought out with the following question: Do receiving states owe a duty to rescue migrants at borders that they do not owe all people in need? In answering this question, the chapter starts with an important yet easily overly looked point: crossing borders is not inherently dangerous. Migrants die crossing borders because receiving states restrict migration. This fact, in ...
An obligation to render assistance to those who are in distress at sea has long been recognized in i...
States cannot legitimately enforce their borders against migrants if dominant conceptions of soverei...
The concept of sovereignty in international law allows states to exclude and expel most categories o...
Although migration is a transnational phenomenon involving a plurality of states, the state of depar...
In recent years, U.S. Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) have cast themselves into a humanitarian role,...
This article begins to undertake a human rights analysis of the increasing number of migrants who di...
Practices of rescue and assistance based on humanitarian concerns for life have increasingly come to...
States are obliged to protect the right to life by law. This article analyses the way in which state...
This book focuses on border deaths at sea. It unravels how the interplay of the law of the sea and r...
My thesis focuses on two questions regarding the permanent movement of persons across international ...
In the last seven years, close to twenty thousand people have died trying to reach Europe by crossin...
The interest of suppressing migrant smuggling at sea is to be considered as part of state sovereignt...
Certain states in the Global North have responded to refugees seeking safety on their territories th...
Aside from the case of refugees under international law, are non-citizen outsiders morally justified...
Containment policies whereby destination States provide funding, equipment and training to transit S...
An obligation to render assistance to those who are in distress at sea has long been recognized in i...
States cannot legitimately enforce their borders against migrants if dominant conceptions of soverei...
The concept of sovereignty in international law allows states to exclude and expel most categories o...
Although migration is a transnational phenomenon involving a plurality of states, the state of depar...
In recent years, U.S. Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) have cast themselves into a humanitarian role,...
This article begins to undertake a human rights analysis of the increasing number of migrants who di...
Practices of rescue and assistance based on humanitarian concerns for life have increasingly come to...
States are obliged to protect the right to life by law. This article analyses the way in which state...
This book focuses on border deaths at sea. It unravels how the interplay of the law of the sea and r...
My thesis focuses on two questions regarding the permanent movement of persons across international ...
In the last seven years, close to twenty thousand people have died trying to reach Europe by crossin...
The interest of suppressing migrant smuggling at sea is to be considered as part of state sovereignt...
Certain states in the Global North have responded to refugees seeking safety on their territories th...
Aside from the case of refugees under international law, are non-citizen outsiders morally justified...
Containment policies whereby destination States provide funding, equipment and training to transit S...
An obligation to render assistance to those who are in distress at sea has long been recognized in i...
States cannot legitimately enforce their borders against migrants if dominant conceptions of soverei...
The concept of sovereignty in international law allows states to exclude and expel most categories o...