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ASYLUM LAW (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   106220


From the right of asylum to migration management: the legal-political construction of 'a refugee' in the post-communist Czech republic / Szczepanikova, Alice   Journal Article
Szczepanikova, Alice Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract International law defines refugees and their rights and the legal obligations of states that receive them. However, the actual formulation and implementation of asylum law are based on the politically and historically contingent constructions of the status of 'refugee' that are determined largely by nation states. This article analyses the legal-political construction of 'refugee' in the post-communist Czech Republic during and after its accession to the European Union. It examines the role of the state and the non-governmental sector and explains the gradual shift that took place towards treating asylum as a matter of migration management rather than a fundamental human right.
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2
ID:   119386


In liberty's shadow: the discourse of refugees and asylum seekers in critical race theory and immigration law/politics / Pulitano, Elvira   Journal Article
Pulitano, Elvira Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This article addresses the potential that a kind of engaged research can have in current battles for social justice and in the transformation of college curricula as a way to recover the original critical spirit of ethnic studies. Building on critical race theory, I discuss the work of NGOs such as Human Rights First and Americans for Immigrant Justice on behalf of Haitian refugees and the role of literature in inspiring human rights actions that might redefine practices of citizenship and belonging. At a time when the United States recognises the rights of refugees but criminalises the search for asylum, coalition building between ethnic studies discourse, the legal academy and the community is vital to affirm and protect the internationally recognised rights of refugees. Crucial in this process is the role played by stories as a way to humanise the often impersonal topic of the immigration debate.
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