This book addresses the relationship between International Refugee Law and International Human Rights Law. Using international refugee law’s analytical turn to human rights as its object of inquiry, it represents a critical intervention into the revisionism that has led to conceptual fragmentation and restrictive practices. Mainstream literature in refugee law reflects a mood of celebration, a narrative of progress which praises the discipline’s rescue from obsolescence. This is commonly ascribed to its repositioning alongside human rights law, its veritable rediscovery as an arm of this far greater edifice. By using human rights logic to construct the current legal paradigm and inform us of who qualifies as a refugee, this purportedly len...
Sixty years on from the signing of the Refugee Convention, forced migration and refugee movements co...
International refugee law has evolved as a means of control over the refugee. The first principles o...
This book addresses a critical gap in existing scholarship by examining statelessness through the pr...
The origins of refugee rights are closely intertwined with the emergence of the general system of in...
The origins of refugee rights are closely intertwined with the emergence of the general system of in...
On April 5, 2019, PILR held their triennial symposium titled: Revisiting Human Rights: The Universal...
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...
The following essay is excerpted from the Epilogue to The Rights of Refugees Under International Law...
How can international law protect both international security and the human rights of displaced peop...
In late 2011 the High Court of Australia and the European Court of Justice made rulings on the condi...
The following essay is excerpted from the Epilogue to The Rights of Refugees Under International Law...
Review of: Refugees and the myth of human rights: Life outside the pale of the law Emma Larking Ashg...
The universal rights of refugees are today derived from two primary sources - general standards of i...
Review of: Refugees and the myth of human rights: Life outside the pale of the law Emma Larking Ashg...
Sixty years on from the signing of the Refugee Convention, forced migration and refugee movements co...
International refugee law has evolved as a means of control over the refugee. The first principles o...
This book addresses a critical gap in existing scholarship by examining statelessness through the pr...
The origins of refugee rights are closely intertwined with the emergence of the general system of in...
The origins of refugee rights are closely intertwined with the emergence of the general system of in...
On April 5, 2019, PILR held their triennial symposium titled: Revisiting Human Rights: The Universal...
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...
The following essay is excerpted from the Epilogue to The Rights of Refugees Under International Law...
How can international law protect both international security and the human rights of displaced peop...
In late 2011 the High Court of Australia and the European Court of Justice made rulings on the condi...
The following essay is excerpted from the Epilogue to The Rights of Refugees Under International Law...
Review of: Refugees and the myth of human rights: Life outside the pale of the law Emma Larking Ashg...
The universal rights of refugees are today derived from two primary sources - general standards of i...
Review of: Refugees and the myth of human rights: Life outside the pale of the law Emma Larking Ashg...
Sixty years on from the signing of the Refugee Convention, forced migration and refugee movements co...
International refugee law has evolved as a means of control over the refugee. The first principles o...
This book addresses a critical gap in existing scholarship by examining statelessness through the pr...