International refugee law has evolved as a means of control over the refugee. The first principles on which it has been built place the rights of the state above those of the refugee. Insofar as there is such a thing as a ‘right of asylum’, it is a right vested in the state rather than the refugee. As such, from the perspective of seeking a protection regime that places the needs of the refugee at its centre, it is a system that is fundamentally unreformable. My argument rests upon the historical development of the first principles developed by jurists from the seventeenth century through to the twentieth century, on the basis of historical development of refugee law between the two world wars, and on the drafting history of the 1951 Refuge...
During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, European governments enacted a series of i...
A refugee is usually thought of as a person compelled to flee his State of origin or residence due t...
In this study our aim is to make a comparison between the refugee concept according to the Conventio...
The origins of refugee rights are closely intertwined with the emergence of the general system of in...
The Convention relating to the Status of Refugees 1951 ("the Convention") is over fifty ye...
There is much careless talk in forced migration studies and elsewhere about a ‘right of asylum’. Usu...
The development of international refugee law since 1951 has long been seen as a necessary and positi...
The development of international refugee law since 1951 has long been seen as a necessary and positi...
This paper will explore the international regime of refugee law, seeking to show how legal solution...
There is a long history of state efforts to provide refugee protection prior to the twentieth centur...
States have been granting protection to individuals and groups fleeing persecution for centuries; ho...
The heart of international refugee law is the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and...
This book addresses the relationship between International Refugee Law and International Human Right...
Ironic though it may seem, I believe that the present breakdown in the authority of international re...
he twenty first century has witnessed disastrous events in different parts of the world causing mill...
During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, European governments enacted a series of i...
A refugee is usually thought of as a person compelled to flee his State of origin or residence due t...
In this study our aim is to make a comparison between the refugee concept according to the Conventio...
The origins of refugee rights are closely intertwined with the emergence of the general system of in...
The Convention relating to the Status of Refugees 1951 ("the Convention") is over fifty ye...
There is much careless talk in forced migration studies and elsewhere about a ‘right of asylum’. Usu...
The development of international refugee law since 1951 has long been seen as a necessary and positi...
The development of international refugee law since 1951 has long been seen as a necessary and positi...
This paper will explore the international regime of refugee law, seeking to show how legal solution...
There is a long history of state efforts to provide refugee protection prior to the twentieth centur...
States have been granting protection to individuals and groups fleeing persecution for centuries; ho...
The heart of international refugee law is the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and...
This book addresses the relationship between International Refugee Law and International Human Right...
Ironic though it may seem, I believe that the present breakdown in the authority of international re...
he twenty first century has witnessed disastrous events in different parts of the world causing mill...
During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, European governments enacted a series of i...
A refugee is usually thought of as a person compelled to flee his State of origin or residence due t...
In this study our aim is to make a comparison between the refugee concept according to the Conventio...