Education opportunities for Syrian refugee children in Lebanon, EU asylum law in the search for mutual trust, Deconstructing the migration experience: life course reflections of Polish WWII child migrants, Forced Migration to the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan: Burden or Boon, The Silent University Visible Award 2013 Ceremony, DR Congo to Tel-Aviv: A story of Congolese refugees, activism and microfinance, Is UNHCR becoming a migration agency? This gives us a unique opportunity to offer an open-access journal that does not require (1) a fee for submitting or reading content, or (2) payment for authors to publish. These numbers include 18 articles from a special issue in December 2019 “New Perspectives on the European Refugee Crisis.” Other Global North countries, including the United States, Canada and Australia, are also overrepresented in relation to the percentage of refugees they are hosting. Rachel McNally is a Project Officer at LERRN, as well as second year Master’s student in the department of Political Science at Carleton University specializing in refugee resettlement policy. Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies (2006 - current) Formerly known as. The statistic stays the same when looking at the first author: only 11 articles (or 7%) list an author based in the Global South as the first author. PROQUEST DATABASE : ProQuest 5000 Search publications: Working Paper Series. Journal of Refugee Studies is a multidisciplinary peer-reviewed journal, and is published in association with the Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford. | Tania Kaiser, New working paper examines use of micro-finance with refugee populations in the Global South, Victoire in Kigali, or: why Rwandan elections are not won transnationally, Alexander Betts and the HIP team win Vice-Chancellor’s Award for Public Engagement with Research, The implications of Brexit for refugee and migration policy are not inevitable | Alexander Betts, What does Brexit mean for refugees?, IRIN asks Alexander Betts, RSC founder Dr Barbara Harrell-Bond awarded an Honorary Doctorate by SOAS, University of London, EU–Jordan deal opens door to employment of refugees in special economic zones, ‘The long-term challenges of forced migration’, an LSE workshop featuring Emeritus Professor Dawn Chatty, Four post-Brexit steps towards a more inclusive world | Alexander Betts at TEDSummit 2016, Humanitarian Innovation Project named one of five ‘Experts to Watch’ spearheading innovative, long-term solutions, We need consistent cooperation and a more realistic approach to responsibility sharing | Alexander Betts, Minor miracle or historic failure?

Now we must learn from him | Jeff Crisp, Now online: papers from LSE Middle East Centre workshop on the Syrian refugee emergency, with Dawn Chatty, New working paper on reintegration outcomes of forced migrants at the local level, focusing on Bosnia and Herzegovina, Emergency shelter: reflections on a new European infrastructure | Tom Scott-Smith, Lack of safe, legal access routes for refugees, such as humanitarian visas, drives demand for smuggling | Cathryn Costello, New working paper asks ‘should human smugglers be brought to justice, or are they bringing about justice?’, The EU refugee relocation plan was doomed from the start | Alexander Betts, New Research in Brief on informal vs formal infrastructure in Kakuma refugee camps, ERC Starting Grant awarded to Cathryn Costello for the project 'Refugees are Migrants', New working paper on refugee economies in Kenya, New book: Mobilising the Diaspora: How Refugees Challenge Authoritarianism, Refugee Economies: Forced Displacement and Development – new book out now, Shelter in flux | Cathrine Brun (Oxford Brookes University), Cathryn Costello wins Odysseus Network Prize for The Human Rights of Migrants and Refugees in European Law, Complicit or emancipatory? Journal Self-citation is defined as the number of citation from a journal citing article to articles published by the same journal. Global Health World Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology Abstracts. Fill out our simple online form to recommend this journal to your library. What can we learn about research in refugee studies? 80% of the world’s refugees are in the Global South. This Thematic Issue collects 8 articles from the journal, providing insights into this forced migration phenomenon of growing relevance. Why Muslim men also care: ethnographic perspectives on ways of loving and caring among young Syrian men in exile in Amman, Solidarity as co-responsibility: EU member states and the pursuit of justice in the field of refugee protection, Network analysis techniques for refugee and forced migration research, Who illegally migrates and why? Volumes 1–6: Roger Zetter, Founding Editor (1988–1993), Volumes 7–13: Roger Zetter and Richard Black (1994–2001), Volumes 14–22: Richard Black and Joanne van Selm (2001–2009), Volumes 23–24: Joanne van Selm and Khalid Koser (2010–2011), Search publications: Journal of Refugee Studies. Badly handled it can make matters worse | Evan Easton-Calabria, New article by Naohiko Omata examines the complexity of refugee-host economic relationships, How UK immigration law discriminates against women | new article by Catherine Briddick, Podcasts from the RSC Conference 2019 ‘Democratizing Displacement’ are now online, RSC Public Seminar Series, Trinity term 2019, Civil solidarity and the hunt for undocumented migrants: resisting the politics of bare life. | New article by Matthew Gibney, The role of mayors in Turkey and Lebanon’s response to Syrian refugees | New article by Alexander Betts, Statement on the RSC and the COVID-19 pandemic, New book | The Global Governed? Can Europe build a unified response to the asylum crisis? Forced resettlement among the Mursi of south Ethiopia, Religion and the ethics of forced migration, The return of IDPs in the middle of the war as a civil resistance movement: the case of the peasant community of Macondo in Turbo, Colombia between 2007 and 2014, BOYA BOYA (Shine Shine), a video portrait by Ruba Al Akash and Karen Boswall, Humanitarian Innovation Conference 2015: Facilitating Innovation, Innocence: understanding a political concept | Annual Elizabeth Colson Lecture 2015, Understanding global refugee policy: the case of naturalisation in Tanzania, Better late than never?

Journal of Refugee Studies.

'The migrant and refugee crisis': A panel discussion on responses and solutions. One major use of ISO 4 is to abbreviate the names of scientific journals. | Dr Mollie Gerver, Alternatives to refugee camps must be pursued as a global principle | Jeff Crisp, Refugees: the Trojan horse of terrorism? Solidarity and Social Networks: The Invisible Backbone That Ethiopians and Eritreans in Washington D.C. used to Transform Adams Morgan and U Street.

Powered by Create your … The Journal covers all categories of forcibly displaced people. Where can the unwanted go? If you click 'Continue' we'll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies and you won't see this message again. History, historical research, and policies of remembrance, History and Memory in Refugee Research | 2nd Workshop of the German Research Foundation (DFG) Research Network 'Foundations of Refugee Research', Informal discussion with T. Alexander Aleinikoff, Standardization of performance measurement and accountability systems in humanitarian aid administration. Where Global South scholars are included in publications with scholars from the Global North, they are more often secondary partners in the research and not first authors.

| Pascal Brice, The elephant in the room: Islam and the crisis of liberal values in Europe | Alexander Betts, Economic zones can play important role but are not an alternative to asylum in Europe | Alexander Betts, Moving forward on asylum in the EU: from crisis to responsibility | Madeline Garlick, Fencing off reality: Hungary's reactions to the arrival of refugees and their interpretation in a European legal, political and moral context | Professor Boldizsár Nagy, There is another way - we need a new vision | Alexander Betts, We have illegalised refugees and created a bonanza for smugglers | Cathryn Costello, Ockenden International Prize awarded to YARID! In contrast, Turkey, Asia and the Pacific, and Sub-Saharan Africa are underrepresented. Weapons of mass migration: forced displacement, coercion and foreign policy, Solidarity and responsibility-sharing for refugee protection in the EU’s Common European Asylum System, Refuge from deprivation: socio-economic harm and non-refoulement in international law, Arbitrary detention of asylum seekers: a comparison of some recent practice from Italy and the UK, Impossible situations: affective impasses and their afterlives in humanitarian and ethnographic fieldwork (Cancelled), The Arab Uprisings: Displacement and Migration, A lost generation? Follow us on @ScimagoJRScimago Lab, Copyright 2007-2020. Abstracts on Hygiene and Communicable Diseases Moving forward on asylum in the EU: from crisis to responsibility, Resettlement to the UK: Between Sovereigns revisited, Fencing off reality: Hungary's reactions to the arrival of refugees and their interpretation in a European legal, political and moral context, Protracted displacement and the challenges of solidarity (CANCELLED), Wasted lives: borders and the right to life of people crossing them, Peaceland: Conflict resolution and the everyday politics of international intervention | Annual Elizabeth Colson Lecture 2016, The meaning of nationality for the purposes of diplomatic protection, Protection in the context of mixed migration in Asia-Pacific; the movements of Rohingyas/Bangladeshi in the Bay of Bengal and Andaman Sea, Geographies of displacement in the Syrian conflict [CANCELLED], Borders and human rights in Europe: exploring recent legal developments, Making sense of the EU-Turkey deal: law, politics and practicalities, Protection, surrogacy and defining refugees, Camps as containment: a genealogy of the refugee camp. External citations are calculated by subtracting the number of self-citations from the total number of citations received by the journal’s documents. By monitoring political, legal and practical developments, we seek to draw attention to the plight of forced migrants, identify gaps within existing international and national protection regimes and engage with the many practical and conceptual concerns which perpetuate displacement. The collection is freely available to read and download until the end of 2020.

PROQUEST DATABASE : ProQuest Research Library

UNHCR’s protection guidelines: what role for external voices?