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With unprecedented numbers of children on the move in search of
safety, Protecting Migrant Children explores the complex legal and
human rights issues that arise when children cross borders as
migrants. It critically examines the strengths and weaknesses of
international and domestic laws with the aim of identifying best
practice for migrant children. The book brings together an
interdisciplinary and multinational group of experts to assess the
nature and root causes of child migration in different parts of the
world, featuring national and comparative case studies in
Australia, Canada, Europe, the United States and parts of Asia and
Africa. The contributors address systematically the many challenges
experienced and posed by young people who cross borders in search
of protection, or a better quality of life. Identifying the many
universal issues facing states who play host to these children, the
book lays the foundations for new paradigms in law, policy and
practice in the reception and management of child migrants,
refugees and victims of trafficking. Topical and engaging, this
book is an important resource for academics and students in human
rights law; migration and refugee law; the administrative and
procedural issues of refugee law, and comparative law; as well as
in the social sciences and health sciences. Policymakers and
workers within the community sector will also find this book
stimulating and informative. Contributors include: E.O. Abuya, F.
Anello, T. Baker, L.B. Benson, S. Bolton, K. Bones, M. Crock, C.
Danisi, D. Ghezelbash, P. Goldberg, C. Holguin, C. Jarvis, K.
Kapur, M.A. Kenny, J. Lelliott, M. Loughry, A. Malakooti, H.
Martin, I. Martinez, G.L. Neuman, A. Olusese, S. Petros, G.
Sadoway, A. Schloenhardt, S. Taylor, C. Thomas, D. Thronson, G.
Triggs, K. Tyler, K. van Doore, S. Whitman, P. Yule, M. Zou
Refugees living with disabilities are often forgotten or invisible
during acute crises of human displacement. This groundbreaking work
examines the experiences of persons with disabilities who have
crossed borders in search of protection from disasters or conflict,
and analyses the existing legal frameworks for their protection.
The authors deftly explore the intersection between one of the
oldest international human rights treaties, the 1951 Refugee
Convention, with one of the newest, the Convention on the Rights of
Persons with Disabilities (CRPD). Drawing on pioneering fieldwork
in six countries - Malaysia, Indonesia, Pakistan, Uganda, Jordan
and Turkey - this book examines how the CRPD is, or should be,
changing the way that governments and aid agencies engage with and
accommodate refugees with disabilities. Its timeliness is
underscored by the adoption in 2016 of the UN Charter on Inclusion
of Persons with Disabilities in Humanitarian Action at the World
Humanitarian Summit. Engaging and thought-provoking, this book will
captivate any scholar studying international law, development,
disability rights and refugee and forced migration studies. It is
also an imperative resource for practitioners and policymakers in
the humanitarian and development sector, as well as international
human rights organisations.
Forced migration is both as ancient as human life on earth and a
relatively new subject of interest for human rights scholars. This
volume continues the discussion from Migrants and Rights to focus
attention on refugees, victims of trafficking and others who cross
borders seeking protection from anthropogenic or natural disasters.
The opening essays provide historical and conceptual overviews of
rights to freedom of movement and asylum; and links between human
rights and refugee law. Articles on the principle of
non-refoulement in international law explore the occasional
disjuncture between the individual's right to protection and the
State's rights to protect its national interests. The refugee's
rights to due process and the substance of entitlements at law are
explored in essays that range across administrative processes;
social and cultural rights, including family reunion; detention;
and the right of return. There follow four essays that address
sexual orientation and refugee rights; refugees and disability
rights; human rights and persons displaced by climate change
disasters; and the rights of victims of human trafficking. The
volume concludes with work reflecting on the rights discourse
outside of traditional 'Western' theatres. These cover Africa
(Kenya), India, South America (Brazil) and the Asia-Pacific
(Indonesia and Papua New Guinea).
The concept of the migrant as rights bearer at law is surprisingly
recent and under-developed. Migrants have traditionally been seen
as outsiders, persons who are in society but not yet of society.
Migrants are at best invitees, 'guests' for whom presence in a
country is a privilege. This is the first of two volumes which
bring together writings which trace the evolution in thinking about
migrants as legal subjects and rights holders. The articles cover:
issues around state sovereignty and migrants as subjects of
international law; the articulation of rights; different categories
of migrants; issues around health and disability. The volume also
features an extended article on the proposal for an International
Migrants' Bill of Rights (IMBR) put forward by an international
consortium of academics and students. A related volume Refugees and
Rights is also published as part of the series.
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Paperback
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R205
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Discovery Miles 1 680
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