Description

Book Synopsis
Families are actors and drivers in migration and refugee crises. However, the current protection frameworks privilege the individual over the family unit. Consequently, the stories of families in migration have remained under-researched and their challenges under-addressed. This volume explores the interplay between family, separation, and migration
in the Middle East, West Africa, Southeast Asia, Europe, and Latin America, and in the context of the 2015 global refugee crisis. Guiding it are two questions: How do family, migration, and separation play out across geographical, political, and historical contexts? And what are the gaps in the protection of migrants and their families? Thirteen authors – academics and practitioners – discuss the international protection for refugees, migration governance, child mobility, disability and immigration, human trafficking, and dilemmas in refugee reporting. The book proposes a paradigm shift in the way we cater to the needs and aspirations of families on the move. Its authors offer evidence-based solutions that cut across polarized discussions on migration and refugees. As such, the volume is aimed at researchers, students, policymakers, and experts working in international relations, migration, human rights, and refugee protection.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Rear Admiral Nicola Carlone, Italian Coast Guard – Acknowledgments – Introduction – Edo Korljan: Family in Europe: An Evolving Concept? – Betty Sacco German: The Italian-Chinese Community in Prato: Insideness, Outsideness, and Cultural Complexes – Robin Ramcharan: International Migration in Southeast Asia: Protection Norms and Challenges Facing the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (A.S.E.A.N.) – Elisa Fornalé: Regional Migration Governance and Social Protection of Migrant Workers – Giji Gya: Taking Care of Countering the Business of Trafficking in Human Beings – Mirela Shuteriqi: Unaccompanied and on the Move: Risks and Opportunities for Migrant Children – Oana A. Scarlatescu: Unaccompanied Migrant Minors in the European Union: Children or Irregular Migrants? A Comparative Analysis of Belgium, Romania, and the United Kingdom – Warren Rosenblum: A Universal Madness: Disability and Immigration Policy in Modern History – Cecilie Hellestveit: The Syrian Exodus and the International Law of Internal Conflict-Induced Displacement – Sumbul Rizvi: A Snapshot of Global Challenges to Refugee Protection in 2014–2015: Regional Trends and Protection at Sea – Sabine Nasser: The Psychosocial Effects on and Traumas of Syrian Women and Children Refugees – Pamela Ballinger: Wartime Evacuations and the Restoration of Italian Families after 1945: A Critical Prehistory for Family Reunification Policy? – Gunilla von Hall: Dilemmas in Refugee and Migration Reporting – Conclusion – Abstracts and Keywords – Contributors – Index.

Family, Separation and Migration: An

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    A Paperback / softback by Michel Oris, Oreste Foppiani, Oana Scarlatescu

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
      Publication Date: 02/05/2023
      ISBN13: 9783034347310, 978-3034347310
      ISBN10: 3034347316

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Families are actors and drivers in migration and refugee crises. However, the current protection frameworks privilege the individual over the family unit. Consequently, the stories of families in migration have remained under-researched and their challenges under-addressed. This volume explores the interplay between family, separation, and migration
      in the Middle East, West Africa, Southeast Asia, Europe, and Latin America, and in the context of the 2015 global refugee crisis. Guiding it are two questions: How do family, migration, and separation play out across geographical, political, and historical contexts? And what are the gaps in the protection of migrants and their families? Thirteen authors – academics and practitioners – discuss the international protection for refugees, migration governance, child mobility, disability and immigration, human trafficking, and dilemmas in refugee reporting. The book proposes a paradigm shift in the way we cater to the needs and aspirations of families on the move. Its authors offer evidence-based solutions that cut across polarized discussions on migration and refugees. As such, the volume is aimed at researchers, students, policymakers, and experts working in international relations, migration, human rights, and refugee protection.

      Table of Contents

      Foreword by Rear Admiral Nicola Carlone, Italian Coast Guard – Acknowledgments – Introduction – Edo Korljan: Family in Europe: An Evolving Concept? – Betty Sacco German: The Italian-Chinese Community in Prato: Insideness, Outsideness, and Cultural Complexes – Robin Ramcharan: International Migration in Southeast Asia: Protection Norms and Challenges Facing the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (A.S.E.A.N.) – Elisa Fornalé: Regional Migration Governance and Social Protection of Migrant Workers – Giji Gya: Taking Care of Countering the Business of Trafficking in Human Beings – Mirela Shuteriqi: Unaccompanied and on the Move: Risks and Opportunities for Migrant Children – Oana A. Scarlatescu: Unaccompanied Migrant Minors in the European Union: Children or Irregular Migrants? A Comparative Analysis of Belgium, Romania, and the United Kingdom – Warren Rosenblum: A Universal Madness: Disability and Immigration Policy in Modern History – Cecilie Hellestveit: The Syrian Exodus and the International Law of Internal Conflict-Induced Displacement – Sumbul Rizvi: A Snapshot of Global Challenges to Refugee Protection in 2014–2015: Regional Trends and Protection at Sea – Sabine Nasser: The Psychosocial Effects on and Traumas of Syrian Women and Children Refugees – Pamela Ballinger: Wartime Evacuations and the Restoration of Italian Families after 1945: A Critical Prehistory for Family Reunification Policy? – Gunilla von Hall: Dilemmas in Refugee and Migration Reporting – Conclusion – Abstracts and Keywords – Contributors – Index.

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