The Oxford handbook of international refugee law / edited by Cathryn Costello, Michelle Foster and Jane McAdam.
Material type:
- International refugee law
- 342.083 23 rd ed. OXF

Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Law Library | 342.083 OXF (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 5437 |
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
Part I. International Refugee Law: Reflections on the Scholarly Field - -
1: International Refugee Law in the Early Years - -
2: Race, Refugees, and International Law - -
3: A Feminist Appraisal of International Refugee Law - -
4: Queering International Refugee Law - -
5: The Politics of International Refugee Law - -
6: The Ethics of International Refugee Protection - -
7: Refugees as Migrants - -
8: The Intersection of International Refugee Law and International Statelessness Law - -
Part II. Sources - -
9: The Architecture of the UN Refugee Convention and Protocol - -
10: The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees - -
11: Moving Towards an Integrated Approach of Refugee Law and Human Rights Law - -
12: International Humanitarian Law and Refugee Protection - -
13: Customary Refugee Law - -
14: National Constitutions and Refugee Protection - -
Part III. Regional Regimes - -
15: Regional Refugee Regimes: Africa - -
16: Regional Refugee Regimes: North America - -
17: Regional Refugee Regimes: Latin America - -
18: Regional Refugee Regimes: Middle East - -
19: Regional Refugee Regime: Europe - -
20: Regional Refugee Regimes: Central Asia - -
21: Regional Refugee Regimes: East Asia - -
22: Regional Refugee Regimes: South Asia - -
23: Regional Refugee Regimes: Southeast Asia - -
24: Refugee Regimes: Oceania - -
Part IV. Access to Protection and International Responsibility-Sharing - -
25: Sharing of Responsibilities for the International Protection of Refugees - -
26: Protection at Sea and the Denial of Asylum - -
27: Extraterritorial Migration Control and Deterrence - -
28: The Evolution of Safe Third Country Law and Practice - -
29: Human Smuggling and Refugees - -
30: Human Trafficking and Refugees - -
31: Refugee Status Determination - -
32: Asylum Procedures - -
33: Credibility, Reliability, and Evidential Assessment - -
Part IV. The Scope of Refugee Protection - -
34: The International and Regional Refugee Definitions Compared - -
35: UNRWA and Palestine Refugees - -
36: Complementary Protection - -
37: Temporary Protection and Temporary Refuge - -
38: The Internal Protection Alternative - -
39: Exclusion - -
40: Women in Refugee Jurisprudence - -
41: Child Refugees - -
42: Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity in Refugee Claims - -
43: Protecting Refugees with Disabilities - -
44: Stateless Refugees 45: Conflict Refugees - -
46: Displacement in the context of Climate Change and Disasters - -
47: Internal Displacement - -
Part V. Refugee Rights and Realities - -
48: The Right to Asylum - -
49: National Constitutions and the Right to Asylum - -
50: Non-refoulement - -
51: Non-penalization and non-criminalization - -
52: The Right to Liberty - -
53: The Right to Work - -
54: The Right to Education - -
55: The Right to Family Reunification - -
56: The Digital Transformation of Refugee Governance - -
Part VI. The End of Refugeehood - Cessation and Durable Solutions - -
57: Cessation - -
58: Refugee Naturalization and Integration - -
59: Reimagining Voluntary Repatriation - -
60: Resettlement - -
61: Onward Migration - -
Part VII. Accountability for Displacement and Refugee Rights Violations - -
62: Restitution and Other Remedies for Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons - -
63: The Responsibility of Armed Groups concerning Displacement - -
64: The Accountability of International Organizations in Refugee and Migration Law - -
65: Border Crimes as Crimes against Humanity - -
"The Oxford Handbook of International Refugee Law is a comprehensive, critical work, which analyses the state of research across the refugee law regime as a whole. Drawing together leading and emerging scholars, the Handbook provides both doctrinal and theoretical analyses of international refugee law and practice. It critiques existing law from a variety of normative positions, with several chapters identifying foundational flaws that open up space for radical rethinking. The Handbook aspires to be global, both legally and geographically. Contributions assess a wide range of international legal instruments relevant to refugee protection, including from international human rights law, international humanitarian law, international migration law, the law of the sea, and international and transnational criminal law. Ultimately, the Handbook provides an account, as well as a critique, of the status quo, and in so doing it sets the agenda for future academic research in international refugee law"
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