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International Refugee Law 2
International Refugee Law 2
Description
Book Introduction
Today, international refugee law and institutions have a history of over 100 years.
Fridtjof Nansen, the first High Commissioner for Refugees of the League of Nations, had to deal with the causes of refugee creation, such as war and conflict, social reconstruction and nation-building, famine and epidemics, problems not so different from those facing the international community today.
We hope this book will serve as a reminder to readers of the inherent dignity of all who seek refuge, and that fleeing persecution or other serious harm is not a crime.
We have attempted to reiterate the importance, resilience, and capacity for development of the international protection system.
We aim to provide an authoritative account of refugees in international law, offering insights into current and future debates and hoping for a future in which the need for asylum may actually be reduced.

index
introduction

Acknowledgements

Translator's Preface


Part 3 Protection

Chapter 9 International Protection

Section 1 International Organizations

Section 1.1 United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)

Section 1.1.1 Relations between the UN General Assembly and UNHCR and the status of UNHCR in general international law

Section 1.1.2 UNHCR Executive Committee

Section 1.2 United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA)

Section 1.3 Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR)

Section 1.4 United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)

Section 1.4.1 Strengthening Collaboration

Section 1.4.2 Complementary Roles of UN Agencies

Section 1.5 Other Organizations and Institutions

Section 1.5.1 International Organization for Migration (IOM)

Section 1.5.2 International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement

Section 1.5.3 Regional Organizations

Section 1.5.4 Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs)

Section 1.5.5 Humanitarian Workers

Section 2 Refugee Protection in International Law

Section 2.1 General International Law

Section 2.2 Treaties and Domestic Law

Section 2.2.1 Principle of Good Faith

Section 3 Protection of Specific Refugee Groups

March 1st Refugee Women

3.2 Refugee Children

3.3 Disabled Refugees


Chapter 10: International Cooperation, Protection, and Solutions

Section 1: Rights of Refugees: Refugee Camps, Settlements, and Society at Large

Section 2 Solution

2.1 Community Integration

Section 2.2 Voluntary repatriation

Section 2.2.1 Facilitating and promoting

2.2.2 Safe return

Section 2.3 Resettlement

Section 2.4 Complementary Pathways to Admission

Section 2.5 Support and Development

Section 3 International Cooperation

March 1st New York Declaration and Global Compact

Section 3.1.1 Global Refugee Compact (GCR)

Section 3.1.2 Global Migration Compact (GCM)


Chapter 11: Standards of the Convention and Implementation in Domestic Law

Section 1: 1951 Refugee Convention and 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees

1.1 Standards of treatment requested

Section 1.1.1 Equality of treatment, employment and social benefits

Section 1.2 Criteria applied to refugees based on their refugee status

Section 1.2.1 Administrative Assistance: Article 25

Section 1.2.2 Identification Card: Article 27

1.2.3 Travel Documents under the Convention: Article 28

Section 1.2.4 Treatment of Refugees Who Entered the Country Illegal: Article 31

Section 1.2.5 Expulsion of Refugees: Article 32

Section 1.2.6 Prohibition of Refoulement: Article 33

1.3 Categories of eligibility for treatment under the Agreement

1.3.1 Simple presence

Section 1.3.2 Lawful presence

Section 1.3.3 Lawful residence

Section 1.3.4 Habitual residence

Section 1.4 Geographical Scope

Section 2 Protection under domestic law: Refugee status determination procedures

Section 2.1 General Criteria for Refugee Status Determination

Section 2.2 The Role of UNHCR in National Refugee Status Determination Procedures

Section 2.3 Due process and procedural fairness in refugee status determination procedures

Section 3 2013 European Union Procedural Directive

Section 4: The Refugee Status Determination Process: From the decision of 'recognition' to the decision of 'rejection'

4.1 Interview, investigation or interrogation date

Section 4.2 Use and Abuse of National Circumstances Information and Other Information

Consistency of the decision in Section 4.3

Section 4.4 Credibility Assessment and Evidence-Based Inference

Section 4.4.1 Reasoning about Credibility: Consistency and Inconsistency

Section 4.5 Objection or Reconsideration

Section 5. Refugee status under domestic law and termination of refugee status

May 1st Refugee Status and the 'Countervailing Force' of Decisions

5.2 Principle of vested rights


Chapter 12 Displacement Related to the Impacts of Disasters and Climate Change

Section 1 Introduction

Section 1.1 Terminology and Concepts

Section 2 Internally Displaced Persons

Section 3 Application of International Refugee Law

Section 4 Application of International Human Rights Law

4.1 Protection from arbitrary deprivation of life

Section 4.2 Protection from inhuman or degrading treatment

Section 4.2.1 Children

Section 4.2.2 Alternative Domestic Refuge

Section 5: The 'Disappearance' of the Nation

Section 6 International Processes and Developments

June 1st Nansen Initiative and Disaster Displacement Platform

Section 6.2 Other International Procedures

Section 7: Preventing displacement and finding permanent solutions


Chapter 13 Nationality, Statelessness, and Protection

Section 1 The Role of Nationality in Inter-State Relations

Section 1.1 The Right to Nationality under International Law

1.2 Deprivation of citizenship

Section 1.2.1 Deprivation of Citizenship and the 1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness

1.2.2 Follow-up execution

Section 1.2.3 Deprivation of Citizenship and Its Implications in International Law

Section 2 Statelessness in International Law and Practice

2.1 League of Nations

2.2 UN

Section 2.2.1 1949 UN Statelessness Study

Section 2.3 1954 Convention Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons

Section 3: Eradicating and preventing statelessness

March 1st International Law Commission

Section 3.1.1 Eradication and Reduction of Statelessness

Section 3.1.2 1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness

Section 4: Protecting Stateless Persons

Protecting Stateless Refugees Through Status Determination on Section 4.1

Protecting Stateless Persons through Status Determination in Section 4.2


References

Index INDEX
GOODS SPECIFICS
- Date of issue: September 29, 2025
- Format: Hardcover book binding method guide
- Page count, weight, size: 652 pages | 152*224*32mm
- ISBN13: 9788949968797

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