This Palgrave Pivot examines refugee camps in the EU, Australia, and their border zones. The approach is interdisciplinary, comprising perspectives of history, ethics, political science, literature, and health. The book argues that current practice of accommodating refugees is arbitrary and disempowering, ranging from strict regulation within nation states to detrimental conditions in extraterritorial camps. It instead proposes to increase public scrutiny of refugee camps, to enforce existing laws, and to endorse ethical place-making. With its contributions from a wide range of fields, this edited volume will be of interest to academics and students in public health, ethics, sociology, politics, and related fields.
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1.Refugee camps: Paradise or Purgatory?.- Part 1: Analytical lenses on camps.- 2.The long and winding road from Castra Regina to Kutupalong: Reflections on the definition and history of camps.- 3.Hannah Arendt and the politics of encampment.- 4.Camp settings in the EU, Australia, and their extended border zones.- 5.Assessing refugee accommodation: from Broken Windows Index to heterotopic spaces.- 6.What the Mountains told us: A conversation on Behrouz Boochani´s book “No Friend But The Mountains”.- Part 2: Ways towards improving refugee accommodation .- 7.Refugees and others enduring displacement: structural injustice, health, and ethical place-making.- 8.Feminist ethics of care, responsibility, and refugee accommodation: Concrete steps towards improvements.
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Oliver Razum is Dean of the School of Public Health at Bielefeld University, Germany, and heads the Department of Epidemiology & International Public Health as full professor. He has conducted research on migrant and refugee health from a public health perspective for more than 25 years.
Lisa Eckenwiler is Professor in the Department of Philosophy at George Mason University, USA. Her research focuses on vulnerable populations, especially in humanitarian settings, and structural health injustice. She is Vice President of the International Association of Bioethics and a Fellow of the Hastings Center.
Verina Wild is Professor of Medical Ethics at Augsburg University, Germany. She works in the area of medical ethics/bioethics, public health ethics and global health ethics, with a special focus on vulnerability, justice and population health.
Angus Dawson is Professor of Bioethics and Director of Sydney Health Ethics at The Universityof Sydney School of Public Health, Australia. He is working in public health ethics with a research interest in ethical issues and dilemmas in international contexts.