State fragility poses a challenge to the refugee regime. Rather than just placing the emphasis on the need to protect people fleeing the acts of states against their own populations, it also demands the protection of people fleeing the omissions of states, whether due to states' unwillingness or to their inability to provide for their citizensâ fundamental rights
Such threats as environmental change, food insecurity, and generalized violence force massive number...
A number of jurisdictions have fastened onto a solution that appears to reconcile respect for refu...
This article examines the long-stating importance of refugee issues in international politics and un...
The development approach to displacement brings advantages not only in addressing the needs of refug...
Governments in all parts of the world are withdrawing in practice from meeting the legal duty to pro...
Forced migration is a long-standing problem for states in the international system. One reason is it...
International treaties, conventions, and organizations to protect refugees were established in the a...
The relative decline of state power and the increase in the significance of various non-state actors...
State fragility has severe political implications. In the literature, fragile states have been refer...
Forty years after the Second World War, the international refugee crisis shows few signs of abating....
Refugees bear incredible political significance for states of asylum and states of origin. Despite t...
A better understanding of state fragility – combined with improvements in policy and funding for dis...
There has been a worrying tendency for the international community to ignore questions of state capa...
Most of world’s over 20 million refugees today reside in protracted refugee situations that are defi...
Why do states protect refugees? In the past twenty years, states have sought to limit access to asyl...
Such threats as environmental change, food insecurity, and generalized violence force massive number...
A number of jurisdictions have fastened onto a solution that appears to reconcile respect for refu...
This article examines the long-stating importance of refugee issues in international politics and un...
The development approach to displacement brings advantages not only in addressing the needs of refug...
Governments in all parts of the world are withdrawing in practice from meeting the legal duty to pro...
Forced migration is a long-standing problem for states in the international system. One reason is it...
International treaties, conventions, and organizations to protect refugees were established in the a...
The relative decline of state power and the increase in the significance of various non-state actors...
State fragility has severe political implications. In the literature, fragile states have been refer...
Forty years after the Second World War, the international refugee crisis shows few signs of abating....
Refugees bear incredible political significance for states of asylum and states of origin. Despite t...
A better understanding of state fragility – combined with improvements in policy and funding for dis...
There has been a worrying tendency for the international community to ignore questions of state capa...
Most of world’s over 20 million refugees today reside in protracted refugee situations that are defi...
Why do states protect refugees? In the past twenty years, states have sought to limit access to asyl...
Such threats as environmental change, food insecurity, and generalized violence force massive number...
A number of jurisdictions have fastened onto a solution that appears to reconcile respect for refu...
This article examines the long-stating importance of refugee issues in international politics and un...