AANRADER: Heel tijdschrift vol met artikelen over vreemdelingenbewaring en uitzetting (in het Engels)
Forced Migration Review issue 44, entitled 'Detention, alternatives to detention, and deportation', is now online at www.fmreview.org/detention
Asylum seekers and refugees - men, women and even children - are increasingly detained and interned around the world, as are numbers of other migrants. Sometimes detained indefinitely and often in appalling conditions, they may suffer not only deprivation of their liberty but other abuses of their human rights too. Detention may appear to be a convenient solution to states' political quest to manage migration (often as a precursor to deportation) but it is an expensive option and has lasting effects on those detained. In the search for a more humane - and cheaper - approach, agencies and government authorities have trialled a variety of alternatives to detention.
FMR 44 includes 36 articles on immigration detention, alternatives to detention, and deportation, plus a mini-feature on the Syria crisis (available separately online at www.fmreview.org/detention/syria.pdf) and a selection of other articles.
Link naar pagina met tijdschrift en eerdere nummers: http://www.fmreview.org/issues
In verband met geldwolven die denken geld te kunnen claimen op krantenartikelen die op een blog als deze worden geplaatst maar na meestal een dag voor de krantenlezers aan leeswaardigheid hebben ingeboet terwijl wij vreemdelingenrecht specialisten ze soms wel nog jaren gebruiken om er een kopie van te maken voor een zaak ga ik over tot het plaatsen van alleen het eerste stukje. Ja ik weet het: de kans dat u doorklikt is geringer dan wanneer het hele artikel hier staat en een kopie van het orgineel maken handig kan zijn voor uw zaak. Wilt u zelf wat overnemen van dit weblog. Dat mag. Zet er alleen even een link bij naar het desbetreffende artikel zodat mensen niet alleen dat wat u knipt en plakt kunnen lezen maar dat ook kunnen doen in de context.
Asylum seekers and refugees - men, women and even children - are increasingly detained and interned around the world, as are numbers of other migrants. Sometimes detained indefinitely and often in appalling conditions, they may suffer not only deprivation of their liberty but other abuses of their human rights too. Detention may appear to be a convenient solution to states' political quest to manage migration (often as a precursor to deportation) but it is an expensive option and has lasting effects on those detained. In the search for a more humane - and cheaper - approach, agencies and government authorities have trialled a variety of alternatives to detention.
FMR 44 includes 36 articles on immigration detention, alternatives to detention, and deportation, plus a mini-feature on the Syria crisis (available separately online at www.fmreview.org/detention/syria.pdf) and a selection of other articles.
Forced Migration Review issue 44 - CONTENTS
Let op de link staat er per artikel nu achter
DETENTION Detention under scrutiny Alice Edwards (UNHCR) www.fmreview.org/detention/edwards Psychological harm and the case for alternatives Janet Cleveland (CSSS de la Montagne Research Centre) www.fmreview.org/detention/cleveland Establishing arbitrariness Stephen Phillips (Åbo Akademi University, Finland) www.fmreview.org/detention/phillips-s Voices from inside Australia's detention centres Melissa Phillips (University of Melbourne) www.fmreview.org/detention/phillips-m Health at risk in immigration detention facilities Ioanna Kotsioni, Aurélie Ponthieu and Stella Egidi (MSF) www.fmreview.org/detention/kotsioni-et-al The impact of immigration detention on children Alice Farmer (Human Rights Watch) www.fmreview.org/detention/farmer Captured childhood David Corlett (International Detention Coalition) www.fmreview.org/detention/corlett No change: foreigner internment centres in Spain Cristina Manzanedo (Centro Pueblos Unidos-SJM) www.fmreview.org/detention/manzanedo Detention monitoring newly established in Japan Naoko Hashimoto (International Organization for Migration, Tokyo) www.fmreview.org/detention/hashimoto Be careful what you wish for Michael Flynn (Graduate Institute's Programme for the Study of Global Migration) www.fmreview.org/detention/flynn A return to the 'Pacific Solution' Fiona McKay (Deakin University) www.fmreview.org/detention/mckay My story: indefinite detention in the UK William (Freed Voices/Detention Action) www.fmreview.org/detention/william Closed detention in the Czech Republic: on what grounds? Beata Szakacsova (Organization for Aid to Refugees in the Czech Republic) www.fmreview.org/detention/szakacsova Threats to liberty in Germany Jolie Chai (University of Erfurt) www.fmreview.org/detention/chai New European standards Dersim Yabasun (Maastricht University) www.fmreview.org/detention/yabasun Detention of women: principles of equality and non-discrimination Ali McGinley (Association of Visitors to Immigration Detainees) www.fmreview.org/detention/mcginley Security rhetoric and detention in South Africa Roni Amit (African Centre for Migration and Society) www.fmreview.org/detention/amit Detention in Kenya: risks for refugees and asylum seekers Lucy Kiama and Dennis Likule (Refugee Consortium of Kenya) www.fmreview.org/detention/kiama-likule A last resort in cases of wrongful detention and deportation in Africa Matthew C Kane and Susan F Kane (Ryan Whaley Coldiron Shandy PLLC/Oklahoma City University School of Law) www.fmreview.org/detention/kane-kane Women: the invisible detainees Michelle Brané and Lee Wang (Women's Refugee Commission) www.fmreview.org/detention/brane-wang Do higher standards of detention promote well-being? Soorej Jose Puthoopparambil, Beth Maina-Ahlberg and Magdalena Bjerneld (Uppsala University) www.fmreview.org/detention/puthoopparambil-et-al ALTERNATIVES TO DETENTION Immigration detention: looking at the alternatives Philip Amaral (Jesuit Refugee Service Europe) www.fmreview.org/detention/amaral Thinking outside the fence Robyn Sampson (La Trobe University) www.fmreview.org/detention/sampson Predisposed to cooperate Cathryn Costello and Esra Kaytaz (University of Oxford) www.fmreview.org/detention/costello-kaytaz Alternatives to detention in the UK: from enforcement to engagement? Jerome Phelps (Detention Action) www.fmreview.org/detention/phelps New models for alternatives to detention in the US Megan Bremer, Kimberly Haynes, Nicholas Kang, Michael D Lynch and Kerri Socha (Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service in the US) www.fmreview.org/detention/bremer-et-al Alternatives to detention: open family units in Belgium Liesbeth Schockaert (UNHCR) www.fmreview.org/detention/schockaert Community detention in Australia Catherine Marshall, Suma Pillai and Louise Stack (Jesuit Refugee Service Australia) www.fmreview.org/detention/marshall-et-al Flawed assessment process leads to under-use of alternatives in Sweden Maite Zamacona (Swedish Red Cross) www.fmreview.org/detention/zamacona Questions over alternatives to detention programmes Stephanie J Silverman (Nathanson Centre on Transnational Human Rights, Crime and Security) www.fmreview.org/detention/silverman State reluctance to use alternatives to detention Clément de Senarclens (Université de Neuchâtel) www.fmreview.org/detention/senarclens DEPORTATION No longer a child: from the UK to Afghanistan Catherine Gladwell (Refugee Support Network) www.fmreview.org/detention/gladwell Shortcomings in assistance for deported Afghan youth Nassim Majidi (Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris/Samuel Hall Consulting) www.fmreview.org/detention/majidi Assisted voluntary return schemes Anne Koch (Berlin Graduate School for Transnational Studies) www.fmreview.org/detention/koch Deportation of South Sudanese from Israel Laurie Lijnders (independent) www.fmreview.org/detention/lijnders Post-deportation monitoring: why, how and by whom? Leana Podeszfa and Friederike Vetter (Post-Deportation Monitoring Network) www.fmreview.org/detention/podeszfa-vetter SYRIA CRISIS Humanitarian and medical challenges of assisting new refugees in Lebanon and Iraq Caroline Abu Sa'Da and Micaela Serafini (MSF) www.fmreview.org/detention/abusada-serafini Failure to adapt: aid in Jordan and Lebanon Jon Bennett (independent) www.fmreview.org/detention/bennett Dimensions of gender-based violence against Syrian refugees in Lebanon Ghida Anani (ABAAD-Resource Center for Gender Equality) www.fmreview.org/detention/anani Conflict in Syria compounds vulnerability of Palestine refugees Gavin David White (UNRWA) www.fmreview.org/detention/white GENERAL ARTICLES UNHCR in Uganda: better than its reputation suggests Will Jones (Refugee Studies Centre) www.fmreview.org/detention/jones Insights from the refugee response in Cameroon Angela Butel (Multifaith Engagement in the Public Sphere) www.fmreview.org/detention/butel Freedom of movement of Afghan refugees in Iran Farshid Farzin and Safinaz Jadali (UNHCR) www.fmreview.org/detention/farzin-jadali Community rejection following sexual assault as 'forced migration' AJ Morgen (American Graduate School in Paris/Friends of Orphans Uganda) www.fmreview.org/detention/morgen Cash and vouchers: a good thing for the protection of beneficiaries? Michelle Berg, Hanna Mattinen and Gina Pattugalan (independent/UNHCR/WFP) www.fmreview.org/detention/berg-et-al Refugees' rights to work Emily E Arnold-Fernández and Stewart Pollock (Asylum Access/University of California) www.fmreview.org/detention/arnoldfernandez-pollock
Link naar pagina met tijdschrift en eerdere nummers: http://www.fmreview.org/issues
In verband met geldwolven die denken geld te kunnen claimen op krantenartikelen die op een blog als deze worden geplaatst maar na meestal een dag voor de krantenlezers aan leeswaardigheid hebben ingeboet terwijl wij vreemdelingenrecht specialisten ze soms wel nog jaren gebruiken om er een kopie van te maken voor een zaak ga ik over tot het plaatsen van alleen het eerste stukje. Ja ik weet het: de kans dat u doorklikt is geringer dan wanneer het hele artikel hier staat en een kopie van het orgineel maken handig kan zijn voor uw zaak. Wilt u zelf wat overnemen van dit weblog. Dat mag. Zet er alleen even een link bij naar het desbetreffende artikel zodat mensen niet alleen dat wat u knipt en plakt kunnen lezen maar dat ook kunnen doen in de context.
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