In discussions on migration, a basic distinction is often made between ‘voluntary’ and ‘forced’



Download 437.72 Kb.
View original pdf
Page16/22
Date07.11.2023
Size437.72 Kb.
#62532
1   ...   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   ...   22
Asylum and Refugee Studies Today
Assignment #11 (Group) Draft research proposal (PART 1)
Conclusions
This chapter has offered away to think about the global governance of forced migration, explaining its institutional, political and normative dimensions. The global governance of forced migration is made up of a complex and fragmented set of institutions that have emerged and evolved overtime, building upon the modern refugee regime created in the aftermath of World War II. The trajectory and effectiveness of these institutions has been shaped overtime by their position within the broader structures of world politics, being shaped and remoulded by power, interests and ideas. Today, the global governance of forced migration faces a range of challenges in terms of who to protect and how to protect. Ina world in which protection space is being threatened by states unwillingness and inability to protect, creative and innovative forms of collective action are urgently needed. A clear conceptual understanding of the global governance of forced migration can tell us many things about the constraints and opportunities available for reforming existing institutions and adapting to a changing landscape of forced migration.
Note
1 North and South are inevitably imperfect empirical categories. However, they capture a useful analytical distinction between advanced industrialised states and, in broad terms, developing countries. In the refugee regime, this is a useful distinction because it highlights the different structural positions occupied by a small number of donor and resettlement states and host states within regions of origin (Betts 2009b).
References
Betts, A, 2003. Public goods theory and the provision of refugee protection the role of the joint- product model in burden-sharing theory. Journal of Refugee Studies, 16(3), 361–82.
Betts, A, a. Forced Migration and Global Politics. Oxford Wiley-Blackwell Publishing.
Betts, Ab. Protection by Persuasion International Cooperation in the Refugee Regime. Ithaca Cornell University Press.
Betts, A, 2010. The refugee regime complex. Refugee Survey Quarterly, 29(2), 12–37.
Betts, A. (Ed, 2012. Global Migration Governance. Oxford Oxford University Press.
Betts, A, 2013. Survival Migration Failed Governance and the Crisis of Displacement. Ithaca Cornell University Press.

Global governance and forced migration
319
Betts, A, Bloom, L, Kaplan, J. and Omata, N, 2014. Refugee Economies Rethinking Popular Assumptions. Oxford Refugee Studies Centre.
Betts, A, Loescher, G. and Milner, J, 2012. UNHCR: The Politics and Practice of Refugee Protection.
Abingdon: Routledge. Landau, L. and Amit, R, 2014. Wither policy Southern African perspectives on understanding law, refugee policy and protection. Journal of Refugee Studies, 27 (4), 534–52.
Loescher, G. and Milner, J. (Eds, 2008. The Politics, Human Rights and Security Dimensions of Protracted
Refugee Situations. Tokyo: United Nations University Press.
Loescher, G, 2001. The UNHCR and World Politics A Perilous Path. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
McAdam, J, 2007. Complementary Protection in International Refugee Law. Oxford Oxford University Press. Orchard, Pa. A Right to Flee Refugees, States, and the Construction of International Cooperation.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Orchard, Pb. Implementing a global internally displaced persons protection regime. In A. Betts and P. Orchard (Eds, Implementation and World Politics How International Norms Change Practice. Oxford Oxford University Press, pp. 105–23. Price, ME, 2009. Rethinking Asylum History, Purpose, and Limits. Cambridge Cambridge University
Press.
Richmond, A, 1993. Reactive migration sociological perspectives on refugee movements. Journal of
Refugee Studies, 6(1), 7–24.
Skran C, 1995. Refugees in Inter-War Europe The Emergence of a Regime. Oxford Clarendon Press.
Suhrke, A, 1998. Burden-sharing during refugee emergencies the logic of collective versus national action. Journal of Refugee Studies, 11(4), 396–415.


320

Download 437.72 Kb.

Share with your friends:
1   ...   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   ...   22




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page