Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

forced migration review

Return (Forced Migration Review 62)

FMR 62 - IDPs of East Beirut versus the Lebanese State

This year marks the thirtieth anniversary of the Taif agreement that formally ended the Lebanese Civil War of 1975–1990. Three decades later, some communities remain internally displaced because of the actions of the State.
Return (Forced Migration Review 62)

FMR 62 - Emerging options for durable solutions in Darfur

IDPs in Darfur continue to face difficulties in securing a durable solution to their displacement. Recent developments may offer new hope for some, but complex challenges remain.
Return (Forced Migration Review 62)

FMR 62 - Political and economic reintegration: key to successful return

Refugees and IDPs require national and international actors to make concerted efforts to ensure that they are successfully reintegrated into the economic, social and political landscapes of their countries of origin.
Return (Forced Migration Review 62)

FMR 62 - Returns in complex environments: the case of South Sudan

Humanitarian agencies must be extremely cautious about how they support returns and relocations to ensure that they avoid causing harm or allowing humanitarian assistance to be instrumentalised by political actors.
Return (Forced Migration Review 62)

FMR 62 - Mini-feature - Preventing displacement, addressing root causes and the promise of the Global Compact on Refugees

Preventing displacement by addressing its root causes requires a holistic approach and engagement by a wide range of actors. The starting point must be a better understanding of root causes and their complexity.
Return (Forced Migration Review 62)

FMR 62 - Mini-feature - Shifting power and changing practice to support locally led peace building

Building sustainable peace requires both a greater awareness of the dynamics of localised conflict and a willingness on the part of external actors to cede control to local actors.
Return (Forced Migration Review 62)

FMR 62 Mini-feature - Land and conflict: taking steps towards peace

Thousands of displaced Yazidis in Iraq have been assisted in making a safe, sustainable return through a project that addressed the complexity of issues around land tenure.
Return (Forced Migration Review 62)

FMR 62 - Mini-feature - Community-level conflict prevention and peace building in DRC and Somalia

There is growing recognition of the need to address the root causes of displacement through the perspective of the humanitarian-development-peace ‘triple nexus’. A locally led programme in DRC and Somalia reflects this approach and offers useful lessons.
Return (Forced Migration Review 62)

FMR 62 - Mini-feature - Gang violence, GBV and hate crime in Central America: State response versus State responsibility

Significant displacement is caused in Central America by gang violence, gender-based violence and hate crimes against LGBT+ people but State responses have failed to address their root causes.
Return (Forced Migration Review 62)

FMR 62 - Mini-feature - The Palestinian refugee question: root causes and breaking the impasse

Acknowledging the root causes of Palestinian displacement and objectively applying international law will be key to any solution to the Palestinian refugee question.
Return (Forced Migration Review 62)

FMR 62 - Mini-feature - Resilience spaces: rethinking protection

Collaborative approaches to building capacities of urban IDPs and host communities are emerging as a more effective way of confronting the root causes of protracted and secondary displacement in informal settlements in Colombia.
Ethics and displacement (Forced Migration Review 61)

FMR 61 - From the Editors

What moral principles guide our work? This issue debates many of the ethical questions that confront us in programming, research, safeguarding and volunteering, and in our use of data, new technologies, messaging and images.
Ethics and displacement (Forced Migration Review 61)

FMR 61 - Big data, little ethics: confidentiality and consent

Donors’ thirst for data is increasingly undermining security and confidentiality, putting both survivors of violence and staff at risk.
Ethics and displacement (Forced Migration Review 61)

FMR 61 - New technologies in migration: human rights impacts

States are keen to explore the use of new technologies in migration management, yet greater oversight and accountability mechanisms are needed in order to safeguard fundamental rights.
Ethics and displacement (Forced Migration Review 61)

FMR 61 - Social media screening: Norway’s asylum system

The growing use of data gathered from social media in asylum claim assessments raises critical yet underexplored ethical questions.
Ethics and displacement (Forced Migration Review 61)

FMR 61 - Developing ethical guidelines for research

The IASFM has agreed an international code of ethics to guide research with displaced people. Challenges that arose during its development merit continued discussion.
Ethics and displacement (Forced Migration Review 61)

FMR 61 - ‘Over-researched’ and ‘under-researched’ refugees

A number of ethical issues emerge from working with ‘over-researched’ and ‘under-researched’ refugee groups.
Ethics and displacement (Forced Migration Review 61)

FMR 61 - Research fatigue among Rwandan refugees in Uganda

Refugees in Nakivale refugee settlement demonstrate research fatigue, yet a return visit by one particular researcher reveals an interesting twist to the tale.
Ethics and displacement (Forced Migration Review 61)

FMR 61 - Over-researching migration ‘hotspots’? Ethical issues from the Carteret Islands

The situation of the Carteret Islanders, often characterised as the first ‘climate change refugees’, has attracted much research interest. What is the impact of such interest? And are standard ethics compliance processes appropriate?
Ethics and displacement (Forced Migration Review 61)

FMR 61 - Ethics and accountability in researching sexual violence against men and boys

Researching sexual violence against men and boys in humanitarian settings requires navigating multiple ethics- and accountability-related tensions.

Pagination

  • First page
  • Previous page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Page 7
  • Page 8
  • Page 9
  • …
  • Next page
  • Last page

Footer

  • About
  • Accessibility
  • Contribute
  • Copyright
  • Contact
  • Privacy
'Oxford Podcasts' Twitter Account @oxfordpodcasts | MediaPub Publishing Portal for Oxford Podcast Contributors | Upcoming Talks in Oxford | © 2011-2022 The University of Oxford