This study presents an examination of the historical background
and contemporary significance of the asylum and refugee issue
confronting Western governments that draws lessons for future
policy-making.
This is the first study of the asylum-refugee problems to
examine not only the history of policies of receiving nations in
the West but also some of the underlying causes of refugee
movements. Past studies of the asylum problem have focused narrowly
on the conditions in receiving countries and have failed to see the
global interconnectedness of the refugee problem. The authors argue
that resolving the asylum problem in the West requires policy
makers to direct their attention toward the conditions outside the
industrialized countries that cause mass movements of populations
as well as toward the improvement of their own asylum
procedures.
The present increase in the number of asylum-seekers and
refugees is neither a temporary phenomenon nor a random product of
chance events. It is the predictable consequence of fundamental
political, demographic, economic, and ecological crises occurring
throughout the Third World and Eastern Europe. However, Western
governments did not until relatively recently envisage a
large-scale movement of the poor countries northward to Western
Europe and North America. Actual migratory pressures from the South
and perceived threats of exodus from the East have only served to
reinforce a restrictive attitude toward asylum. The refugee problem
has reached such a critical point that the very institution of
asylum is being threatened. These articles address the underlying
causes of the current crisis, assess present policies, and define
the considerations necessary for future policy-making.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!