Palestinian Refugee Repatriation Global Perspectives 1st Edition by Michael Dumper – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 0415384974, 9780415384971
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 0415384974
ISBN 13: 9780415384971
Author: Michael Dumper
Palestinian Refugee Repatriation Global Perspectives 1st Table of contents:
1 Introduction The comparative study of refugee repatriation programmes and the Palestinian case
What is the Palestinian refugee issue?
Purpose of the study
The impact of current events on the project
Structure of the book
References
Part I Trends and patterns in refugee repatriation Overview and the Palestinian case
2 Return of refugees Retrospect and prospect
‘Refugee studies’: key themes
Return of refugees in the ‘decade of repatriation’
Return in public policy
Return of refugees: themes and discourses in the literature
The ‘right’ to return: a right denied
Return as failure
The practice of return
Conclusion
Note
References
3 UNHCR and repatriation
Repatriation policies and mechanisms
Becoming a priority
Repatriation mechanisms
Protection
Repatriations at the end of the Cold War
Integration programs in countries of origin
Linking repatriations to broader peace-building programs
Effecting protection during war to peace transitions
Returnees in need of protection
Linking repatriation assistance programs to broader economic revitalization
The debate over UNHCR’s role in reintegration
Post-conflict returns: present prospects
Notes
References
4 Perspectives on Palestinian repatriation
Key issues
Border controls
Repatriation management and relocation assistance
Absorption policy for refugees
Refugee camps
UNRWA and refugee social services
The role of donors
Conclusion
Notes
References
5 The Palestinian refugees of 1948 Models of allowed and denied return
The problem in context
Point of origin
Track two models on Palestinian return
Limited success on track two: four case studies
The Harvard forum
Beilin–Abu-Mazin
The Madrid paper
The Geneva Model Accord (2003)
The permanent status talks
Summary
References
Part II Case studies
6 ‘Sustainable returns’? State, politics and mobile livelihoods – the Guatemalan case
The conflict in historical perspective
Dynamics of displacement
Frameworks of return
The institutional set-up (s)
International institutions
National government institutions
Other institutions and organizations
The refugee organizations
Choices and options
Return, reintegration and mobile livelihoods
Refugee return and state- and peace-building
Conclusion
Notes
References
7 What does “adequate assistance” mean in the context of promoting viable return and appropriate compensation?> Lessons from the Horn of Africa
The dream and the reality of return
UNHCR’s mandate with respect to return
Lessons from the Horn of Africa
Restoration of pre-exile conditions
Refugees should enjoy the same standard of living that they had when they were in exile
Returnees should enjoy the same standard of living as those who did not migrate
Return should be seen as a development opportunity
Adherence to international, national, or regional standards
Measuring self-sufficiency through household economy analysis
Model A: parity with local communities
Model B: integration in the absence of a local community
Conclusion: implications for Palestine
Notes
References
8 Linking return and reintegration to complex forced migration emergencies Diversities of conflict, patterns of displacement and humanitarian responses – a comparative analysis
The diversity of conflict and shifting patterns of displacement
Sri Lanka
East Timor
Burundi
Georgia
Colombia
Humanitarian challenges and constraints on assistance
Relief and security
Circumstances of displacement and the provision of relief
Declining aid budgets
Incoherence in coordination
Refugee repatriation, IDP return, and reintegration
Repatriation and protection gaps
The complex issue of land
Political expediency and unrealistic timeframes
Return and humanitarian failure
Poor planning and insufficient knowledge
Repatriation, new humanitarianism and neo-liberal reforms
Conclusion
Notes
References
9 Refugee return in Bosnia and Herzegovina
The rights of refugees and displaced persons
The return of refugees and displaced persons
Return programs
The problem of occupied property
Alternatives to return – compensation and resettlement
Progress on return
Conclusion
Notes
References
10 Re-approaching voluntary repatriation within a reconciliation framework A proposal drawn from the Cambodian return process
Re-approaching voluntary repatriation within a reconciliation framework
Existing approaches: trends, challenges, frameworks and limitations on voluntary repatriation approaches since the 1990s
Why is the reconciliation framework relevant in voluntary repatriation approaches?
A proposal drawn from the Cambodian return process5
Theoretical framework from a reconciliation perspective: restorative justice and voluntary repatriation6
The Cambodian transitional process: the contextualization of the Cambodian refugee return process
Conclusions of the 1999–2000 study on the Cambodian return process9
Conclusion
Notes
References
11 UNHCR under duress The reducing power of UNHCR to influence outcomes for Afghan refugees
A historical outline
The early migrations
The early returns
New outflows and internal displacement
The responses of Iran and Pakistan
The responses of donors
The role of UNHCR in the provision of reconstruction assistance to returnees after 2001
The position of the Afghan government
Conclusion
References
12 Politically preferred solutions and refugee choices Applying the lessons of Iraq to Palestine
Voluntariness in international durable solutions standards
Voluntariness in repatriation
Voluntariness in resettlement
Voluntariness in local integration
Voluntariness and politically preferred solutions: a critical analysis
Return to Iraq in the first year since regime change
UNHCR policy
Host countries
Third country resettlement policy
Comparing theory with practice in Iraq
Return, with or without security, with or without UNHCR
Free choice vs. voluntariness vs. desperation
What was the politically preferred situation?
Conclusion: lessons from Iraq
Assessing UNHCR’s standards
Applying the lessons of Iraq to Palestine
Notes
References
Part III Lessons learnt
13 Palestinian return migration Lessons from the international refugee regime
The international refugee regime
Lessons learnt from the refugee return experiences
Political dimension
Sociological dimension
Institutional arrangements
Economic dimension
Conclusion
Notes
References
14 Global perspectives on Palestinian refugee repatriation
Contextualising the study of Palestinian refugee repatriation
Is it possible to make effective comparisons and policy transfers?
Themes drawn from the case studies
International involvement
Refugee participation and capacity generation
Regional and local structures
Justice and reconciliation
Alternatives to repatriation
Towards a toolbox for a Palestinian repatriation programme
International involvement
Refugee participation and capacity generation
Regional and local structures
Justice and reconciliation
Alternatives to repatriation
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Tags: Michael Dumper, Palestinian Refugee, Global Perspectives



