This issue of FMR looks at some of the modalities and challenges of resettlement in order to shed light on debates such as how – and how well – resettlement is managed, whether it is a good use of the funds and energy it uses, and whether it is a good solution for refugees. It contains 33 articles on Resettlement, plus a mini-feature on Post-deportation risks and monitoring and four articles on other forced migration topics. The mini-feature on Post-deportation risks and monitoring is available as a stand-alone 12-page pdf but is not available in print; please feel free to print it yourself. See more at www.fmreview.org/resettlement.
This issue of FMR looks at some of the modalities and challenges of resettlement in order to shed light on debates such as how - and how well – resett...
Around the 60th anniversary of the Hungarian uprising it is worth looking back on the efforts to resettle refugees to see that debates about how to he...
There is an imbalance of power - and a resulting lack of agency for refugees - in the structure of the current resettlement regime. The top-down proce...
More than 100,000 Bhutanese refugees have been found homes in third countries. The other side to the story of this successful resettlement programme, ...
There are growing numbers of refugees in the UK who have been through a resettlement programme. New research in four UK cities highlights opportunitie...
The European Migration Network has published a study on resettlement, humanitarian admission and private sponsorship programmes in the Member States o...
While resettlement is nowadays considered as a solution to be resorted to only in exceptional circumstances, in Southeast Asia resettlement has always...
The evolution of European policy in recent years has shown how policy can be used to actively restrict the movement of people and as a mechanism for c...