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forced migration review

Detention and deportation (Forced Migration Review 44)

FMR 44 Voices from inside Australia's detention centres

At the heart of the asylum debate in Australia there is little sense of the individual in question. People who had previously been asylum seekers in immigration detention express in their own words the impact that detention had on them.
Detention and deportation (Forced Migration Review 44)

FMR 44 Establishing arbitrariness

There is no understanding of what the term "arbitrary" entails; understanding it requires awareness of the different factors affecting how individual deprivations of liberty are examined and understood.
Detention and deportation (Forced Migration Review 44)

FMR 44 Psychological harm and the case for alternatives

Studies in countries around the world have consistently found high levels of psychiatric symptoms among imprisoned asylum seekers, both adults and children.
Detention and deportation (Forced Migration Review 44)

FMR 44 Detention under scrutiny

UNHCR's new detention guidelines challenge governments to rethink their detention policies and to consider alternatives to detention in every case.
Detention and deportation (Forced Migration Review 44)

FMR 44 From the editors

From the editors.
States of fragility (Forced Migration Review 43)

FMR 43 Understanding refugees' concepts of sexual and gender-based violence

Sexual and gender-based violence prevention campaigns that incorporate culturally sensitive understanding will stand a better chance of breaking down barriers to accessing services.
States of fragility (Forced Migration Review 43)

FMR 43 Emergency need for telecommunications support

The Haiti experience challenged the international humanitarian community to take advantage of the possibilities of increasingly available and common communications technologies and networks, and to ensure access to the infrastructure enabling it to do so.
States of fragility (Forced Migration Review 43)

FMR 43 Poetry as women's resistance to the consequences of Bedouin displacement in Jordan

Bedouin women are able to mitigate some of the consequences of that displacement through the opportunities and influence they have gained as Nabati poets.
States of fragility (Forced Migration Review 43)

FMR 43 Older people and displacement

At all phases of the displacement cycle, flight, displacement and return, older people are exposed to specific challenges and risks which are not sufficiently taken into account.
States of fragility (Forced Migration Review 43)

FMR 43 Harming asylum seekers' chances through poor use of human rights treaties

Over the past decade, UK courts and administrative tribunals have become increasingly comfortable relying on international human rights treaties in cases where non-citizens claim asylum or other means of protection from persecution.
States of fragility (Forced Migration Review 43)

FMR 43 Trails of Tears: raising awareness of displacement

Trails of Tears have arisen to draw attention and give legitimacy to multiple movements for fairness and justice, hoping to create a community of support strong enough to rectify a past injustice or prevent a future one.
States of fragility (Forced Migration Review 43)

FMR 43 The arts in refugee camps: ten good reasons

Refugees' involvement in artistic activity: music, theatre, poetry, painting, often plays a powerful positive role in their ability to survive physically and even emotionally and spiritually.
States of fragility (Forced Migration Review 43)

FMR 43 Crisis in Lebanon: camps for Syrian refugees?

Lebanon has absorbed the enormous Syrian influx but at a high cost to both refugees and Lebanese populations. Current humanitarian programmes can no longer cope and new approaches are needed.
States of fragility (Forced Migration Review 43)

FMR 43 State fragility, displacement and development interventions

The development approach to displacement brings advantages not only in addressing the needs of refugees, IDPs and host communities but also in helping societies tackle the underlying aspects of fragility that may have caused the displacement.
States of fragility (Forced Migration Review 43)

FMR 43 Psychiatric treatment with people displaced in or from fragile states

Psychiatrists working to assess psychological distress and mental health in fragile states, or with refugees from fragile states, need to adopt flexible approaches.
States of fragility (Forced Migration Review 43)

FMR 43 Displacement in a fragile Iraq

The post-Saddam Iraqi state enjoys only limited support from the population, excludes significant sections of its people from power, suppresses the opposition and does not protect citizens from arbitrary arrests, and corruption is rampant.
States of fragility (Forced Migration Review 43)

FMR 43 Was establishing new institutions in Iraq to deal with displacement a good idea?

The humanitarian, developmental and political consequences of decades of mass forced migration are part of the legacy that the current political leaders of Iraq need to address.
States of fragility (Forced Migration Review 43)

FMR 43 The curious case of North Korea

Displacement and distress migration within and outside North Korea may be an indicator of state fragility but a reduction in numbers should not necessarily be read as a sign of improving conditions there.
States of fragility (Forced Migration Review 43)

FMR 43 Data quality and information management in DRC

Forced migration creates special challenges to collecting data and monitoring responses in fragile states where infrastructure and systems are weak or non-existent.
States of fragility (Forced Migration Review 43)

FMR 43 Refugees from Central American gangs

El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras are largely ignored by refugee agencies who underestimate transnational criminal organisation' abuses and powers of control, while overestimating national governments' ability and willingness to protect their citizens.

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