More Rights, Less Justice: Tribal Communities and the Indian RepublicBy Prashant Singh and Meghna Sharma
Self and self-reliance By Gerawork Teferra A woman preparing vegetables for sale in the Kalobeyie integrated refugee settlement area. Photo Credit: Gerawork Tef...
Why Resettlement?By Heba and Nour[1] Children in one of the camps at the Jordanian-Syrian border. Photo Credit: Omair Tabekh. We are Nour and Heba, Syrian...
When ‘qualifying’ as a refugee gets you permanent ‘illegal’ status in Hong KongBy Annie Li Debates around the categorical difference between refugees and migrants are often underpinned by the idea that refugees enjoy...
Eight Years of Displacement: Syria’s Statelessness Still UnidentifiedBy Thomas McGee and Zahra Albarazi
A Model of Protracted Suffering among Refugees on the Greek Islands: The Case of ChiosBy Mohamad Alhussein Saoud and Marta Welander
Water Scarcity and Environmental Displacement in Southern Iraq: Perceptions and RealitiesBy Tiba Fatli
Regionalisation versus Securitisation: The Pending Fate of the Refugee Protection Regime in Central America By Brianna Gómez Castro This article contributes to the growing lite...
Challenges to the Governance of the Return of Victims Abroad to Colombia By Paul De Ryck and Stéphanie López Villamil The return to Colombia of victims of the armed conflict living abroad has arisen as a major ...
Between Torture and Hiding: The North Korean Migration Case in China By Phillip Kraeter Different reasons underlie North Koreans decision to cross the border into China irregularly, including state-driven p...
Beyond the ‘Women-and-children’ Bias in Human Trafficking:A Study of Haitian Migrants in the Dominican Republic By Jean-Pierre Murray The anti-trafficking agenda has faced at least two main criti...
The Picture from Above: Using Satellite Imagery to Overcome Methodological Challenges in Studying Environmental Displacement By Alison Heslin and Lisa Thalheimer...
‘Indigenous peoples’ rights in the context of borders, migration and displacement’:A UN study on indigenous migration. By Anne-Cécile Leyvraz
‘We took to the nature to become friends with the mountain’The Impacts of Access to ‘Nature’ on Refugee Wellbeing in Camps in Epirus, Greece By Michaela Korodimou