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GLOBAL CHANGE PEACE AND SECURITY VOL: 19 NO 3 (4) answer(s).
 
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ID:   080580


Criminal justice response to trafficking in persons: practical problems with enforcement in the Asia-Pacific Region / Mcsherry, Bernadette; Cullen, Miriam   Journal Article
Mcsherry, Bernadette Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract Attempts to address the problem of trafficking in persons on an international, regional and national basis are relatively recent. The 'Bali Process' refers to an ongoing programme of practical cooperation between over 40 Asian and Pacific countries which arose out of the Regional Ministerial Conferences on People Smuggling, Trafficking in Persons and Related Transnational Crime held in Bali in February 2002 and April 2003. The Conferences, together with the United Nations' Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children, provided the impetus for the enactment of national legislation to criminalize trafficking in persons. This article analyses the criminal justice response to trafficking persons in the Asia-Pacific region since the enactment of the Protocol and argues that there are numerous practical problems with the enforcement of new trafficking provisions. Drawing on case studies in Australia and New Zealand, it is argued that other offences may be more easily enforced and that the emphasis on enacting new offences detracts from addressing human rights issues and the social dynamics of migration.
Key Words Human Rights  Migration  Smuggling  Trafficking 
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2
ID:   080581


Melanesian seasonal migration as a potential contribution to se / Ware, Helen   Journal Article
Ware, Helen Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract The Pacific Region has justifiably become increasingly concerned about insecurity in the Pacific island countries. In the longer term, the solution to this insecurity lies not in the military intervention of Regional Assistance Missions, or the external imposition of good governance programmes, but in economic development that specifically gives young people a stake in their country rather than a motivation for unrest or permanent emigration. The paper discusses the potential for seasonal migration from Melanesia, as contrasted with permanent emigration from Polynesia, to make a contribution both to island economies and to regional security. Kiribati's and Tuvalu's experiences with the temporary migration of seafarers are examined for possible lessons. The recently implemented New Zealand seasonal migration programme for the Pacific is set out as a possible model for further development
Key Words Migration 
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3
ID:   080582


Migration, Gender and security issues in the pacific: complicating conflict discourse / Johnson, Helen   Journal Article
Johnson, Helen Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract This article explores the intersections between migrants (international, internal and settler-descendent), gender, and human security. It focuses on Fiji, Bougainville and New Caledonia as distinctive Pacific contexts in which to analyse how colonial and contemporary migration flows have contributed to the destabilization of local communities. It works to complicate the pervasive discourse about women as 'victims' of conflict by describing women's contributions to peace-building and human security in Fiji and Bougainville, as well as women's involvement in conflict in Kanak peoples' struggles for independence in New Caledonia and their subsequent peace-building efforts. The Fiji Women Peace and Security Coordinating Committee exemplifies how indigenous women are working with contemporary settler-descendents of colonial migrants as committed peace-builders. In Bougainville continuous conflict is linked to the stresses generated by contemporary migration, as people move within Papua New Guinea and others move from the Solomon Islands and elsewhere to obtain value from resource extraction enterprises, thus creating ongoing tensions with and within indigenous communities. Yet collectives such as the Bougainville Women for Peace and Freedom group have effectively worked to build peace in their island's communities. Although Kanak women contributed to struggles for social, political and economic independence in New Caledonia throughout the 20th century, which arose from a history of colonial migration and the social impact of contemporary migration, in recent years Kanak women have worked towards the reconciliation of indigenous Kanak communities with settler-descendent and contemporary international migrants via political structures and organizations.
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4
ID:   080579


Such a Long Journey: protracted refugee situations in Asia / Lui, Robyn N   Journal Article
Lui, Robyn N Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract While the international community focuses on major humanitarian and refugee emergencies, 60-70 per cent of the world's refugees displaced by conflict and human rights violations have been languishing in a state of neglect and insecurity in camps and urban slums - some for over twenty years. Protracted situations exist in the Caucasus, the Middle East, Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and East and West Africa. This article will focus on protracted displacement in Asia. It begins by providing an overview of the scale of displacement in the region. It then examines some of the causes and consequences of long-term displacement and recent efforts of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and other humanitarian and development agencies to provide relief, protection, and durable solutions for over a million displaced people in Asia
Key Words Migration  Refugees  Asia 
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