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African Asylum at a Crossroads: Activism, Expert Testimony, and
Refugee Rights examines the emerging trend of requests for expert
opinions in asylum hearings or refugee status determinations. This
is the first book to explore the role of court-based expertise in
relation to African asylum cases and the first to establish a
rigorous analytical framework for interpreting the effects of this
new reliance on expert testimony. Over the past two decades, courts
in Western countries and beyond have begun demanding expert reports
tailored to the experience of the individual claimant. As courts
increasingly draw upon such testimony in their deliberations,
expertise in matters of asylum and refugee status is emerging as an
academic area with its own standards, protocols, and guidelines.
This deeply thoughtful book explores these developments and their
effects on both asylum seekers and the experts whose influence may
determine their fate. Contributors: Iris Berger, Carol Bohmer, John
Campbell, Katherine Luongo, E. Ann McDougall, Karen Musalo, Tricia
Redeker Hepner, Amy Shuman, Joanna T. Tague, Meredith Terretta, and
Charlotte Walker-Said.
Based on intensive fieldwork in an urban American junior high
school, this original study explores the relationship between oral
and written texts in everyday life by analysing tellings and
retellings of local events, diaries, writings and discussions.
Many nations recognize the moral and legal obligation to accept
people fleeing from persecution, but political asylum applicants in
the twenty-first century face restrictive policies and cumbersome
procedures. So, what counts as persecution? How do applicants
translate their stories of suffering and trauma into a narrative
acceptable to the immigration officials? How can asylum officials
weed out the fake from the genuine without resorting to
inappropriate cultural definitions of behaviour? Using both in
depth accounts by asylum applicants and interviews with lawyers and
others involved, this book takes the reader on a journey through
the process of applying for asylum in both the United States and
Great Britain. It describes how the systems address the conflicting
needs of the state to protect their citizens from terrorists and
the influx of hordes of unwelcome economic migrants, while at the
same time adhering to their legal, moral and treaty obligations to
provide safe haven for those fleeing persecution. Rejecting
Refugees is an insightful and fresh evaluation of the obstacles
asylum applicants face and the cultural, procedural, and political
discrepancies in the political asylum process. This makes it ideal
reading to students and scholars of political science,
international relations, sociology, law and anthropology.
Many nations recognize the moral and legal obligation to accept
people fleeing from persecution, but political asylum applicants in
the twenty-first century face restrictive policies and cumbersome
procedures. So, what counts as persecution? How do applicants
translate their stories of suffering and trauma into a narrative
acceptable to the immigration officials? How can asylum officials
weed out the fake from the genuine without resorting to
inappropriate cultural definitions of behaviour?
Using both in depth accounts by asylum applicants and interviews
with lawyers and others involved, this book takes the reader on a
journey through the process of applying for asylum in both the
United States and Great Britain. It describes how the systems
address the conflicting needs of the state to protect their
citizens from terrorists and the influx of hordes of unwelcome
economic migrants, while at the same time adhering to their legal,
moral and treaty obligations to provide safe havenfor those fleeing
persecution.
Rejecting Refugees is an insightful and fresh evaluation of the
obstacles asylum applicants face and the cultural, procedural, and
political discrepancies in the political asylum process. This makes
it ideal reading to students and scholars of political science,
international relations, sociology, law and anthropology.
Based on intensive fieldwork in an urban American junior high
school, this original study explores the relationship between oral
and written texts in everyday life by analysing tellings and
retellings of local events, diaries, writings and discussions.
This book explores the legitimacy of political asylum applications
in the US and UK through an examination of the varieties of
evidence, narratives, and documentation with which they are
assessed. Credibility is the central issue in determining the
legitimacy of political asylum seekers, but the line between truth
and lies is often elusive, partly because desperate people often
have to use deception to escape persecution. The vetting process
has become infused with a climate of suspicion that not only
assesses the credibility of an applicant's story and differentiates
between the economic migrant and the person fleeing persecution,
but also attempts to determine whether an applicant represents a
future threat to the receiving country. This innovative text
approaches the problem of deception from several angles, including
increased demand for evidence, uses of new technologies to examine
applicants' narratives, assessments of forged documents, attempts
to differentiate between victims and persecutors, and ways that
cultural misunderstandings can compromise the process. Essential
reading for researchers and students of Political Science,
International Studies, Refugee and Migration Studies, Human Rights,
Anthropology, Sociology, Law, Public Policy, and Narrative Studies.
What is the role of folklore in the discussion of catastrophe and
trauma? How do disaster survivors use language, ritual, and the
material world to articulate their experiences? What insights and
tools can the field of folkloristics offer survivors for navigating
and narrating disaster and its aftermath? Can folklorists
contribute to broader understandings of empathy and the roles of
listening in ethnographic work? We Are All Survivors is a
collection of essays exploring the role of folklore in the wake of
disaster. Contributors include scholars from the United States and
Japan who have long worked with disaster-stricken communities or
are disaster survivors themselves; individual chapters address
Hurricane Katrina, Hurricane Maria, and two earthquakes in Japan,
including the earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear disaster of 2011.
Adapted from a 2017 special issue of Fabula (from the International
Society for Folk Narrative Research), the book includes a revised
introduction, an additional chapter with original illustrations,
and a new conclusion considering how folklorists are documenting
the COVID-19 pandemic. We Are All Survivors bears witness to
survivors' expressions of remembrance, grieving, and healing.
As part of this multilayered conversation about stigma, this volume
discusses the relationship between the stigmatized individual and
our role as researchers. Here we address our own perspectives as
researchers struggling with stigma issues and tellability, as well
as scholarly reflexive concerns dealing with what can't be said
when working with stigmatized groups or topics. The disciplinary
focus of folklore positions us well to concentrate on the
vernacular experience of the stigmatized, but it also propels us
toward analysis of the performance of stigma, the process of
stigmatization, and the political representation of stigmatized
populations. These perspectives come to the fore in this book, as
does the multilayered nature of stigma-its ability to reproduce,
overlap, and spread, not just in terms of replication but also in
terms of the ethnographer's ability to apprehend it and her ability
to research and write about it.
What is the role of folklore in the discussion of catastrophe and
trauma? How do disaster survivors use language, ritual, and the
material world to articulate their experiences? What insights and
tools can the field of folkloristics offer survivors for navigating
and narrating disaster and its aftermath? Can folklorists
contribute to broader understandings of empathy and the roles of
listening in ethnographic work? We Are All Survivors is a
collection of essays exploring the role of folklore in the wake of
disaster. Contributors include scholars from the United States and
Japan who have long worked with disaster-stricken communities or
are disaster survivors themselves; individual chapters address
Hurricane Katrina, Hurricane Maria, and two earthquakes in Japan,
including the earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear disaster of 2011.
Adapted from a 2017 special issue of Fabula (from the International
Society for Folk Narrative Research), the book includes a revised
introduction, an additional chapter with original illustrations,
and a new conclusion considering how folklorists are documenting
the COVID-19 pandemic. We Are All Survivors bears witness to
survivors' expressions of remembrance, grieving, and healing.
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