Monographie

Non-signatory states in international refugee law / edited by Maja Janmyr, Özlem Gürakar Skribeland and Arjumand Bano Kazmi

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  • sans médiation
  • Volume
  • Non-signatory states in international refugee law / edited by Maja Janmyr, Özlem Gürakar Skribeland and Arjumand Bano Kazmi
  • Leiden Boston (Mass.) : Brill-Nijhoff
  • C 2025
  • 1 volume (VI-242 pages) : illustrations, carte ; 24 cm
  • International refugee law series 2213-3836 volume 22
  • 978-9-0047-1029-0
  • 90-04-71029-9
  • 9789004710290 relié
  • International refugee law series 2213-3836 22
  • 342.083
  • Textes issus de communications, présentés lors de deux colloques, tenus en mai 2023 et août 2024
  • Notes bibliographiques. Index
  • Studying Non-signatory States : A Shared Ambition, Complementary Approaches / Maja Janmyr and Özlem Gürakar Skribeland Reflections on Conducting Empirical Research in Non-signatory States / Simon Behrman and Dallal Stevens Judicial Engagement with International Refugee Law : An Exploratory Study on Domestic Courts in Non-signatory States / Gamze Ovacık and Aneesha Johny Asian Exceptionalism Revisited / Brian Barbour Acceding to the Refugee Convention : Indonesia's Persistent Reluctance / Bilal Dewansyah "Disharmony" in the Kingdom of the Netherlands : (De)colonialization and Non-accession in Aruba and Curaçao / Natalie Dietrich Jones The Republic of China (Taiwan) and International Refugee Law : 1911-2024 / Lili Song From Global Commitments to Local Implementation : A Legal Analysis of Thailand's National Screening Mechanism / Jittawadee Chotinukul Mechanisms of Enrollment : How the Network of International Protection Grows / Georgia Cole UNHCR-Host State Agreements as Alternative Protection Regimes / Maja Janmyr, M Sanjeeb Hossain and Lewis Turner Universities and UNHCR : Teaching International Refugee Law in Pakistan / Arjumand Bano Kazmi and Sikander Ahmed Shah
  • "We are at a critical juncture in the development and application of international refugee law. On the one hand, the continued relevance of the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees1 and its 1967 Protocol2 ("the Refugee Convention"3) has come under doubt, and political and scholarly debates about "the end" of the global refugee protection regime are ongoing. 4 On the other hand, major refugee-hosting countries in several regions of the world are not party to the Refugee Convention, leading some mainstream scholarship and practice to view them or their regions as an "exception" to international refugee law." (éditeur)
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