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Reflecting on three decades of post-conflict recovery in the
Balkans, this incisive book investigates the long-term effects of
war displacement on women across Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia,
and Kosovo. Selma Porobic and Brad K. Blitz draw upon four
different research streams produced by a large, cross-national, and
multidisciplinary team of contributors to compare the experiences
of different categories of war-uprooted and/or women forced
migrants. Providing a gender-inclusive focus on psychosocial
wellbeing, chapters consider the long-term impacts of complex
trauma on internally displaced persons, returnees, and refugees
throughout the whole cycle of displacement, return, and
reintegration. Uncovering alarming risk and protective factors
linked to protracted political and socioeconomic instability in the
region, the book ultimately offers lessons for a wider post-war
recovery framework that prioritises women’s agency, psychosocial
health, and trans-generational recovery. Featuring
interdisciplinary, cross-country, and multi-methods research, this
insightful book will prove an invaluable resource to students and
scholars of sociology, migration, gender, and human rights law. Its
critical assessment of durable solutions for displaced populations
will also benefit practitioners focused on peace building,
humanitarianism, and development.
In this timely and important book, Professor Brad K. Blitz, a
leading expert on post-conflict integration, statelessness,
migration, development and human rights, reminds us how the concept
of freedom of movement, and its relationship to migration, has
received little comprehensive treatment among academics, even
though it underpins what we expect as individuals living in liberal
states. Yet, there are 214 million international migrants and 740
million internal migrants in the world today. It is all the more
paradoxical therefore that there is no guarantee of the right of
freedom of movement where most migration takes place against the
backdrop of both official and unofficial controls. With strong
theoretical underpinnings, and drawing from a range of
philosophers, both ancient and modern, Professor Blitz, examines
the legal foundations for the free movement of people, before
undertaking a practical critique of recent free movement
experiences in Spain, Italy, Serbia, Croatia, Russia and Slovenia.
This is a tour de force. A work of remarkable scholarship,
prescience, and practical relevance, which deserves to be read by
all on this much-neglected subject of freedom of movement.' -
Satvinder Juss, King s College London, UK'An advance, both
analytically and empirically, for migration studies. With a base in
international law and political theory, Blitz admirably opens up
the ambiguous question of freedom of movement in relation to the
restrictions still imposed by national borders and sovereignty, and
the difficulties migrants face turning movement into successful
settlement. Focusing on Europe, and migration experiences internal
and external to the EU, as well as within and across national
boundaries, the book significantly challenges current immigration
paradigms with a series of atypical and provocative case studies.'
- Adrian Favell, Sciences Po, Paris, France Migration and Freedom
is a thorough and revealing exploration of the complex relationship
between mobility and citizenship in Europe. Brad Blitz draws upon
European and international law, political theory, economics,
history and contemporary studies of migration to provide an
original account of the opportunities and challenges associated
with the right to free movement in Europe and beyond. Integrating
over 160 interviews with individuals in Croatia, Slovenia, Italy,
Spain, the UK and Russia, this book provides a unique focus on both
internal and inter-state mobility and a re-evaluation of the
concept of freedom of movement. The author documents successful and
unsuccessful settlement and establishment cases and records how
both official and informal restrictions on individuals' mobility
have effectively created new categories of citizenship and
exclusion within Europe. This book is an original study aimed at
academics, students and government officials interested in
migration, international studies, public and social policy, and
politics. Contents: 1. Migration and Freedom 2. Investigating
Freedom of Movement 3. Freedom of Movement in Europe 4. Spanish
Doctors in the United Kingdom 5. European Language Teachers in
Italy 6. Displaced Serbs in Croatia 7. Internal Migrants in Russia
8. Discrimination and Immobility in Slovenia 9. Analysis 10.
Conclusion Bibliography
In this timely and important book, Professor Brad K. Blitz, a
leading expert on post-conflict integration, statelessness,
migration, development and human rights, reminds us how the concept
of freedom of movement, and its relationship to migration, has
received little comprehensive treatment among academics, even
though it underpins what we expect as individuals living in liberal
states. Yet, there are 214 million international migrants and 740
million internal migrants in the world today. It is all the more
paradoxical therefore that there is no guarantee of the right of
freedom of movement where most migration takes place against the
backdrop of both official and unofficial controls. With strong
theoretical underpinnings, and drawing from a range of
philosophers, both ancient and modern, Professor Blitz, examines
the legal foundations for the free movement of people, before
undertaking a practical critique of recent free movement
experiences in Spain, Italy, Serbia, Croatia, Russia and Slovenia.
This is a tour de force. A work of remarkable scholarship,
prescience, and practical relevance, which deserves to be read by
all on this much-neglected subject of freedom of movement.' -
Satvinder Juss, King s College London, UK'An advance, both
analytically and empirically, for migration studies. With a base in
international law and political theory, Blitz admirably opens up
the ambiguous question of freedom of movement in relation to the
restrictions still imposed by national borders and sovereignty, and
the difficulties migrants face turning movement into successful
settlement. Focusing on Europe, and migration experiences internal
and external to the EU, as well as within and across national
boundaries, the book significantly challenges current immigration
paradigms with a series of atypical and provocative case studies.'
- Adrian Favell, Sciences Po, Paris, France Migration and Freedom
is a thorough and revealing exploration of the complex relationship
between mobility and citizenship in Europe. Brad Blitz draws upon
European and international law, political theory, economics,
history and contemporary studies of migration to provide an
original account of the opportunities and challenges associated
with the right to free movement in Europe and beyond. Integrating
over 160 interviews with individuals in Croatia, Slovenia, Italy,
Spain, the UK and Russia, this book provides a unique focus on both
internal and inter-state mobility and a re-evaluation of the
concept of freedom of movement. The author documents successful and
unsuccessful settlement and establishment cases and records how
both official and informal restrictions on individuals' mobility
have effectively created new categories of citizenship and
exclusion within Europe. This book is an original study aimed at
academics, students and government officials interested in
migration, international studies, public and social policy, and
politics. Contents: 1. Migration and Freedom 2. Investigating
Freedom of Movement 3. Freedom of Movement in Europe 4. Spanish
Doctors in the United Kingdom 5. European Language Teachers in
Italy 6. Displaced Serbs in Croatia 7. Internal Migrants in Russia
8. Discrimination and Immobility in Slovenia 9. Analysis 10.
Conclusion Bibliography
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees estimates that
there are more than 12 million stateless people in the world. The
existence of stateless populations challenges some central tenets
of international law and contemporary human rights discourses, yet
only a very small number of states have made measurable progress in
helping individuals acquire or regain citizenship. This fascinating
study examines positive developments in eight countries and
pinpoints the benefits of citizenship now enjoyed by formerly
stateless persons. The expert contributors present an original
comparative study that draws upon legal and political analysis as
well as empirical research (incorporating over 120 interviews
conducted in eight countries), and features the documentary
photography of Greg Constantine. The benefits of citizenship over
statelessness are identified at both community and individual
level, and include the fundamental right to enjoy a nationality, to
obtain identification documents, to be represented politically, to
access the formal labor market and to move about freely. Gaining or
reacquiring citizenship helps eliminate isolation and solicits the
empowerment of individuals, collectively and personally. Such
changes are of considerable importance to the advancement of a
human rights regime based on dignity and respect. This highly
original and thought-provoking book will strongly appeal to a
wide-ranging audience including academics, researchers, students,
human rights activists and government officials with an interest in
a diverse range of fields encompassing law, international studies,
public policy, human rights and citizenship.
The violence following the break-up of the former Yugoslavia has
lasted for more than a decade and continues to mark the region.
This 2006 volume analyses the causes of the conflict and describes
its course from the onset of war in Croatia to intervention in
Kosovo. The book concentrates on four key transformations: the
demise of Yugoslavia and the creation of new states; the importance
of nationalist ideologies in the preparation of war and their
subsequent decline in the post conflict era; the role of
international actors as policy makers, implementing agencies, and
arbiters; and the process of democratization and integration into
European structures. With contributions from some of the world's
leading scholars of the Balkans and personal accounts from
journalists, diplomats, and civil servants drawing upon their own
experiences of war and transition, War and Change in the Balkans
provides an unparalleled insight into contemporary European
history.
Statelessness in the European Union draws together original
research from over one hundred interviews in Estonia, France,
Slovenia and the United Kingdom to provide one of the first
comparative accounts of the de facto or de jure stateless
populations in the European Union. It blends legal, political and
empirical research to examine how non-citizens without secure
status, in some cases established undocumented migrants and their
descendants, manage their lives in four European Union member
states. Normative and legal analyses of the practical meaning of
basic human rights are combined with a groundbreaking investigation
of the obstacles that prevent people from accessing essential
services. Contrasting the situation of Europe's stateless now with
that examined by Arendt over fifty years ago, it considers
proposals for the future security of Europe's stateless people.
The violence following the break-up of the former Yugoslavia has
lasted for more than a decade and continues to mark the region.
This 2006 volume analyses the causes of the conflict and describes
its course from the onset of war in Croatia to intervention in
Kosovo. The book concentrates on four key transformations: the
demise of Yugoslavia and the creation of new states; the importance
of nationalist ideologies in the preparation of war and their
subsequent decline in the post conflict era; the role of
international actors as policy makers, implementing agencies, and
arbiters; and the process of democratization and integration into
European structures. With contributions from some of the world's
leading scholars of the Balkans and personal accounts from
journalists, diplomats, and civil servants drawing upon their own
experiences of war and transition, War and Change in the Balkans
provides an unparalleled insight into contemporary European
history.
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