Taking the context of forced migration, this book addresses the role that regional, in contrast to national or global, institutions and relationships play in shaping asylum policies and procedures. It examines the causes of forced migration movements; the direction of forced migration flows and its effect upon the immediate region; policy responses towards forced migration (in particular ASEAN and the European Community); cooperative arrangements and agreements between regional states; and the protection of human rights. The book also considers the role that regional responses are likely to play in determining the direction of asylum policy in receiving states and procedures in the future.
Cuprins
List of Tables
List of Contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Regionalism as a Response to a Global Challenge
Susan Kneebone and Felicity Rawlings-Sanaei
- Old regionalism: development of the international refugee protection system
- The 1969 Organisation of African Unity Convention
- The Cartagena Declaration
- The Comprehensive Plan of Action
- New Regionalism: UNHCR’s Convention Plus and Agenda for Protection
Chapter 1. The Migration–Asylum Nexus and Regional Approaches
Stephen Castles
- Introduction
- What is the migration–asylum nexus?
- Notes for a political economy of forced migration
- Regional responses
- Conclusion
Chapter 2. Strategies, Stories and Smuggling: Inter-regional Asylum Flows and Their Implications for Regional Responses
Khalid Koser
- Introduction
- Methodology
- The impact of asylum and immigration policies and procedures
- The role of social networks
- The growing significance of smuggling
- Implications of regional responses
Chapter 3. Forced Migration, Engineered Regionalism and Justice between States
Matthew J. Gibney
- Introduction
- History
- The need for justice amongst states
- The commodification objection
- Conclusion
Chapter 4. The Europeanization of Refugee Policy
Joanne van Selm
- Introduction
- What do we mean by Europe?
- How does Europe relate to the Refugees Convention refugee ‘policy regime’?
- What distinctions are there in national refugee policies across Europe?
- The European level: a Europeanized refugee policy?
- The future: a Europeanized refugee policy?
- Conclusion
Chapter 5. Europeanization of Citizenship and Asylum Policy: a Case Study of the U.K.
Nazila Ghanea
- Introduction
- EU policies on free movement, citizenship and nationality: the 1992 Maastricht Treaty and 1997 Amsterdam Treaty
- Free movement, citizenship, nationality and the development of EU asylum policy
- EU laws and policies and the impact of such on the situation of asylum in the U.K.
Chapter 6. North American Responses: a Comparative Study of U.S. and Canadian Refugee Policy
François Crepéau and Stephen H. Legomsky
- Introduction
- The Canadian refugee process
- The United States refugee process
- Canada–U.S. cooperation on immigration and border control issues
- Conclusion
Chapter 7. Australia, Indonesia and the Pacific Plan
Susan Kneebone and Sharon Pickering
- Introduction
- Australia’s refugee policy: from the CPA to Tampa
- Indonesia and the Pacific Strategy
- Protection under the Pacific Strategy
- Conclusion
Chapter 8. New Regionalisms, New Migrations and New Regulations in Africa: Asylum Seekers, Diasporas and Development at the Start of a New Century
Timothy M. Shaw
- Introduction
- Migrations and globalizations in Africa
- Migrations and the ‘new’ Africas
- ‘New’ regionalisms and contemporary migration
- Towards ‘new’ African regime(s) for migration at the start of the twenty-first century?
- New security dilemmas
- Implications for analysis and policy
Chapter 9. Regionalism, Human Rights and Forced Migration
Colin Harvey
- Introduction
- International refugee law and human rights protection
- Global, regional and national interactions
- Conclusion
Chapter 10. Conclusion: Challenges Ahead
Susan Kneebone
Index
Despre autor
Felicity Rawlings-Sanaei is a Research Fellow at the Monash Institute for the Study of Global Movements, Monash University.