Transitions: Refugees and Natives
Identifieur interne : 001325 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 001324; suivant : 001326Transitions: Refugees and Natives
Auteurs : Patricia Tuitt [Royaume-Uni]Source :
- International Journal on Minority and Group Rights [ 1385-4879 ] ; 2013.
Descripteurs français
- Wicri :
- topic : Convention européenne, Droits de l'homme, Réfugié.
English descriptors
- KwdEn :
- Alienage, Arendt, Asylum, Authentic refugee, Conceptual flaw, Condition precedent, Contemporary politics, Convention definition, Degrading treatment, European convention, European union, European union states, First part, Foreign lands, Fortress europe, Group rights, Homo sacer, Human rights, International journal, Legal determination, Many commentators, Member states, Modern system, Modern world, Nomad, Nomos, Other elements, Other works, Oxford university press, Persecution, Political beginnings, Political community, Political order, Positive norms, Qualification directive, Refugee, Refugee context, Refugee convention, Refugee definition, Refugee phenomenon, Refugee situation, Refugee status, Refugeehood, Safe countries, Safe country, Safe locations, Safe states, Schmitt, Sovereign claim, Sovereign power, Such fear, Territorial borders, Tuitt, Unhcr, Unhcr handbook, Unhcr statement, Vantage point.
- Teeft :
- Alienage, Arendt, Asylum, Authentic refugee, Conceptual flaw, Condition precedent, Contemporary politics, Convention definition, Degrading treatment, European convention, European union, European union states, First part, Foreign lands, Fortress europe, Group rights, Homo sacer, Human rights, International journal, Legal determination, Many commentators, Member states, Modern system, Modern world, Nomad, Nomos, Other elements, Other works, Oxford university press, Persecution, Political beginnings, Political community, Political order, Positive norms, Qualification directive, Refugee, Refugee context, Refugee convention, Refugee definition, Refugee phenomenon, Refugee situation, Refugee status, Refugeehood, Safe countries, Safe country, Safe locations, Safe states, Schmitt, Sovereign claim, Sovereign power, Such fear, Territorial borders, Tuitt, Unhcr, Unhcr handbook, Unhcr statement, Vantage point.
Abstract
European Directive 2004/83 (the ‘Qualification Directive’) limits claims for asylum to those refugees coming from outside of the European Union. This provision institutionalises a long established practice in which member states of the European Union are presumed to be safe countries of origin and safe countries of asylum. This article argues that the European Union could not have come into being without producing refugees. With reference to the definition of refugee enshrined within Article 1.A (2) of the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees1 and the jurisprudence surrounding one key qualifying element of the definition – persecution – the article seeks to explore how the international law governing the status of refugee has been deployed to deny that the European Union is a place of origin of refugees.
Url:
DOI: 10.1163/15718115-02002003
Affiliations:
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Le document en format XML
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<term>Refugee convention</term>
<term>Refugee definition</term>
<term>Refugee phenomenon</term>
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<term>Authentic refugee</term>
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<term>Condition precedent</term>
<term>Contemporary politics</term>
<term>Convention definition</term>
<term>Degrading treatment</term>
<term>European convention</term>
<term>European union</term>
<term>European union states</term>
<term>First part</term>
<term>Foreign lands</term>
<term>Fortress europe</term>
<term>Group rights</term>
<term>Homo sacer</term>
<term>Human rights</term>
<term>International journal</term>
<term>Legal determination</term>
<term>Many commentators</term>
<term>Member states</term>
<term>Modern system</term>
<term>Modern world</term>
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<term>Nomos</term>
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<term>Oxford university press</term>
<term>Persecution</term>
<term>Political beginnings</term>
<term>Political community</term>
<term>Political order</term>
<term>Positive norms</term>
<term>Qualification directive</term>
<term>Refugee</term>
<term>Refugee context</term>
<term>Refugee convention</term>
<term>Refugee definition</term>
<term>Refugee phenomenon</term>
<term>Refugee situation</term>
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<term>Refugeehood</term>
<term>Safe countries</term>
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<term>Safe locations</term>
<term>Safe states</term>
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<term>Sovereign claim</term>
<term>Sovereign power</term>
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<term>Territorial borders</term>
<term>Tuitt</term>
<term>Unhcr</term>
<term>Unhcr handbook</term>
<term>Unhcr statement</term>
<term>Vantage point</term>
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<front><div type="abstract">European Directive 2004/83 (the ‘Qualification Directive’) limits claims for asylum to those refugees coming from outside of the European Union. This provision institutionalises a long established practice in which member states of the European Union are presumed to be safe countries of origin and safe countries of asylum. This article argues that the European Union could not have come into being without producing refugees. With reference to the definition of refugee enshrined within Article 1.A (2) of the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees1 and the jurisprudence surrounding one key qualifying element of the definition – persecution – the article seeks to explore how the international law governing the status of refugee has been deployed to deny that the European Union is a place of origin of refugees.</div>
</front>
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