Archive for the ‘law’ Category

Resource Summary: Algeria

Monday, June 7th, 2010

Two Saharawi refugee children playing football in Smara camp.

Forced Migration Online has recently published a new resource summary, focusing on Algeria.

The summary provides an outline of present and historical causes of forced migration within Algeria. It also gives an overview of Algeria’s relationship to various international refugee conventions and its role as host to several thousand refugees including the Sahrawi, as well as refugees from Palestine and Sub-Saharan Africa.

All our summaries provide links to key resources, websites and documents exploring contemporary debate on on key issues, in forced migration as well as links to wider issues concerned with human rights and displacement. Our full collection of resource summaries, focusing on specific regions and themes, can be accessed from the links below.

Annual Elizabeth Colson Lecture 2010

Monday, April 26th, 2010

The Refugee Studies Centre, (at the Oxford Department of International Development, University of Oxford) is pleased to announce that Professor Saskia Sassen will give the Annual Elizabeth Colson Lecture on 26 May 2010.

Saskia Sassen is the Robert S. Lynd Professor of Sociology and Member, The Committee on Global Thought, Columbia University. Her latest books are “Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global” “Assemblages” (Princeton University Press 2008) and “A Sociology of Globalization” (Norton 2007). She has recently completed a five-year project for UNESCO on sustainable human settlement, the results of which have been published as one of the volumes of the “Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems” (Oxford: EOLSS Publishers).

The lecture will be entitled “The complexity of Powerlessness: What makes human rights law perform?” Saskia Sassen will speak about the limits of power and the complexities of powerlessness – the direct or mediated resistances that the powerless can deploy knowingly or not.

Immigration and human rights help to explore these more abstract issues – especially in powerful countries vis-à-vis undocumented workers, who are among the most vulnerable subjects in those same countries. And yet, under certain conditions, the powerless can make history, even if they do not gain power in this process. She will discuss two institutional domains where powerlessness can become complex and the powerless have made history.

The lecture will take place at the Bernard Sunley Lecture Theatre, St Catherine’s College, Manor Road, Oxford (0X1 3UJ). The event will start at 5pm and will be followed by a drinks reception.

For more information or to reserve a seat, please contact Wouter te Kloeze: wouter.tekloeze@qeh.ox.ac.uk, +44(0)1865 281726

Updated: Guide to Forced Migration Periodicals

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Front cover of 'IMIS - Beiträge', November 2009, IMIS, University of Osnabrück

The research guide to Forced Migration Periodicals has been updated and now includes sections on periodicals that address not only forced migration generally but also health, law, humanitarian assistance, emergency relief and the larger issue of international migration.

This guide lists journals, substantive newsletters and other regularly produced publications that are relevant in the field of forced migration studies. The emphasis has been placed on periodicals that are currently being published and whose online contents are up-to-date.

The collection of links is housed in the Delicious social bookmarking service and will automatically be updated when new titles are added or when existing links are edited.

Short Course on Statelessness and International Law

Friday, February 12th, 2010

A new short course on Statelessness and International Law is a  2.5 day course for experienced practitioners, graduate researchers, parliamentarians and staff, members of the legal profession, government officials, personnel of intergovernmental and non-governmental organisations, advocates and stateless persons.

The course was devised by RSC staff member Dr Alice Edwards, in close cooperation with the Statelessness Unit of UNHCR Headquarters in Geneva. The international legal framework will be led by Professor Guy Goodwin-Gill.

This short course will be facilitated by some of the leading experts on this issue, including:

  • Dr Alice Edwards, Lecturer in International Refugee and Human Rights Law, University of Oxford
  • Dr Matthew Gibney, Reader in Politics and Forced Migration, University of Oxford
  • Professor Guy Goodwin-Gill, Senior Research Fellow and Professor of Public International Law, University of Oxford
  • Gábor Gyulai, Refugee Programme Coordinator, Hungarian Helsinki Committee, Budapest
  • Bronwen Manby, Senior Programme Adviser – Africa, Open Society Justice Initiative
  • Mark Manly, Head, Statelessness Unit, UNHCR Geneva
  • Abbas Shiblak, Research Associate at the Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford; working for several years on the issue of statelessness, in particular in the Middle East.

Personal and professional interest and commitment are the key criteria for participation.

Apply online, or visit the Refugee Studies Centre website for more information.

Geneva Conventions' 60th Birthday

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

Today marks the 60th anniversary of the 1949 Geneva conventions, which provide protection for the victims of armed conflict, both military and civilian, and which every nation has now ratified.

The fourth Convention, ratified on August 12, 1949, addressed the protection of civilians in armed conflict. It was negotiated in the aftermath of World War II, which took the lives of at least 60 million people, the majority of whom were civilians. The existing Geneva Conventions, which relate to the immunity of medical personnel on the battlefield and the treatment of prisoners of war, were extensively revised in 1949.

Podcast: Lord Malloch-Brown: Reputational Hazard: Rescuing Refugees in the Era of Illegal Immigration and Terrorism

Friday, June 27th, 2008

Photograph of Lord Malloch-Brown. London, June 2008. Photo: Tony Hussey.

This podcast was recorded at a lecture organised by the Refugee Studies Centre and sponsored by Clifford Chance, the event was held on Wednesday 18th June 2008 at the offices of Clifford Chance, London. Lord Malloch-Brown, Minister of State for Africa, Asia and the UN gave the lecture which was entitled ‘Reputational Hazard: Rescuing Refugees in the Era of Illegal Immigration and Terrorism’.

Podcast: Human Displacement and Climate Change in International Law

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

Photograph of Yvo de Boer, Executive Secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. The Hague, Netherlands. May 2008. Photo: Radio Netherlands Worldwide.

This podcast was recorded by Radio Netherlands Worldwide at the first of The Hague Debates on Thursday, 22 May 2008 in the Peace Palace and is entitled ‘When home gets too hot: Human Displacement and Climate Change in International Law’. The debate features Professor Roger Zetter, Director of the Refugee Studies Centre.