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By conservative estimates about 50 million migrants are currently
living outside of their home communities, forced to flee to obtain
some measure of safety and security. In addition to persecution,
human rights violations, repression, conflict, and natural and
human-made disasters, current causes of forced migration include
environmental and development-induced factors. Today's migrants
include the internally displaced, a category that has only recently
entered the international lexicon. But the legal and institutional
system created in the aftermath of World War II to address refugee
movements is now proving inadequate to provide appropriate
assistance and protection to the full range of forced migrants
needing attention today. The Uprooted is the first volume to
methodically examine the progress and persistent shortcomings of
the current humanitarian regime. The authors, all experts in the
field of forced migration, describe the organizational, political,
and conceptual shortcomings that are creating the gaps and
inefficiencies of international and national agencies to reach
entire categories of forced migrants. They make policy-based
recommendations to improve international, regional, national, and
local responses in areas including organization, security, funding,
and durability of response. For all those working on behalf of the
world's forced migrants, The Uprooted serves as a call to arms,
emphasizing the urgent need to develop more comprehensive and
cohesive strategies to address forced migration in its complexity.
Despite the emergence of fragile democracies in Latin America in
the 1980s, a legacy of fear and repression haunts this region. This
provocative volume chronicles the effect of systematic state terror
on the social fabric in Chile, Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay from
the 1960s to the mid-1980s. The contributors, primarily Latin
American scholars, examine the deep sense of insecurity and the
complex social psychology of people who live in authoritarian
regimes. There is Argentina, where the brutal repression of the
1976 coup almost completely smothered individuals who might once
have opposed government practices, and Uruguay, where the
government forced the population into neutrality and isolation and
cast a silent pall on everyday life. Accounts of repression and
resistance in Chile and Brazil are also vividly presented. The
denial and rationalization by citizens in all four countries can
only be understood in the context of the generalized fear and
confusion created by the violent military campaigns, which included
abductions, torture, and disappearances of alleged terrorists. The
recent transition to civilian rule in these countries has
spotlighted their powerful legacy of fear. These important essays
reveal disturbing insights into how fear is generated, legitimized,
accommodated, and resisted among people living under totalitarian
rule.
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