Abstract:
Refugees and asylum-seekers face various obstacles in their quest for refuge in
destination countries of their choice. These include dangerous border crossings and
the possibility of being exploited by criminals. For refugees in particular, state
initiated barriers also take the form of restrictive immigration control measures
once the refugees and asylum seekers have landed in the foreign countries of their
choice. Because of such measures, refugee and asylum petitions are not processed
expeditiously as most industrialised countries tighten their borders to pass off
asylum-seekers to their neighbours. Restrictive immigration control measures are
now the developed world‘s primary and, some might argue, sole response to the
growing number of refugees and asylum-seekers. Addressing the existing unequal distribution of responsibility for and protection of refugees should be a fundamental
component of immigration control measures. Greater commitment to
multilateralism should be based mostly on sharing responsibility for refugees,
through relocation, humanitarian visas, or regional and international distribution
systems, and the sharing of resources such as emergency assistance, specialised
personnel, expertise and funding.
Description:
The journal is a forum for the discussion of ideas, scholarly opinions and case studies
on law and policy, statutes, constitutions, general rules of the game (institutional
mechanisms) and policy pronouncements or declared positions that are put to
scrutiny, weighed, interpreted and evaluated. In all these matters, the intention and
context usually define the outcomes and impact. The journal is produced bi
annually.