Where are we on durable solutions for irregularized humanitarian migrants

Webinar to launch special issue of the Journal of Refugee Studies
Migration people walking
Date
Tuesday 19 Dec 2023, 17:00 - 18:15
Type
Webinar
Spoken Language
English
Room
Zoom
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You will receive the Zoom link to the webinar in the registration confirmation email.

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Refugees walking along road

In this webinar, scholars, policy makers and practitioners will take a critical look at various policy responses to irregularized humanitarian migrants who find themselves in the gaps between the narrowing of legal protection and expanded migration law enforcement practices.

On the occasion of the 5th year anniversary of the UN's Global Compact for Migration, the International Institute of Social Studies will be hosting the online launch of the newly published Journal of Refugee Studies Special Issue entitled  'Irregularized Humanitarian Migrants—Policies, Rationales, and the Search for More Durable Solutions', guest edited by: Dr Zeynep KaÅŸlı, Dr Marieke van Houte and Dr Arjen Leerkes.

The Special Issue revolves around persons who are on the move for various humanitarian reasons including war and a lack of social, economic and political safety and who, due to lack of legal channels, cross state borders without authorization.

The introductory article and each contribution tackles three main questions:

  • What policy approaches have been formulated to deal with irregularization of humanitarian migration and what are the outcomes of these different approaches for the migrants concerned, the authorities involved and the wider public, and can these outcomes then be regarded as ‘durable solutions’?
  • What rationales (i.e. legal, institutional, economic, cultural, historical) explain these different policy approaches towards irregularized humanitarian migrants?
  • How should more ‘durable solutions’ for irregularized humanitarian migrants be imagined and defined?

Overall, the Special Issue takes a closer look at  migration governance across regions in Europe, Africa and the wider Middle East and highlights the fact that similar trends can be observed in a variety of geopolitical and political contexts even though they play out differently in terms of scale, human rights issues and local and historical specificities.

The aim is to draw attention to the increasing irregularization of humanitarian migrants and contribute to current scholarly and policy debates on lasting migrant-centred solutions.

Speakers

Commentary by Dr Zeynep Sahin Mencutek.

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