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This book analyses why the Ukrainian state established asylum laws
and policies in the thirty years since 1991, even though the number
of asylum seekers was very low. International and non-governmental
organisations transferred international asylum norms to Ukraine.
Various state and non-state actors participated in this process,
translating, spreading, and resisting those norms. In many cases,
legislative adoption was driven by domestic politicians' pursuit of
recognition by international organisations, such as the European
Union and the Council of Europe, and by their desire to meet
conditionality requirements. NGOs sought to influence
administrative practices, alternating between confrontational and
conciliatory, formal and informal approaches, and often relying on
personal contacts. Actors used and shifted between scales in order
to transfer norms or resist transfer. In the process, they
produced, renegotiated, and confirmed those scales. For instance,
NGOs resorting to the European Court of Human Rights to prevent
refoulement placed the European scale above the national scale.
This book offers a new multi-actor and multi-scalar analysis of
policy transfer.
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