Negotiating Rights: Th e Politics of Local Integration
Advocacy campaigns against the “warehousing” of refugees in camps suggest the facilitation of local integration as a preferred policy option for states, international organizations, and non-governmental organizations. This paper argues that the institutions, assumptions, and habits that the interna...
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doaj-3a53497efb2f43e19ffe5530769653be2020-11-25T03:28:15ZengYork University LibrariesRefuge 0229-51131920-73362011-04-0126210.25071/1920-7336.32081Negotiating Rights: Th e Politics of Local IntegrationTara Polzer Advocacy campaigns against the “warehousing” of refugees in camps suggest the facilitation of local integration as a preferred policy option for states, international organizations, and non-governmental organizations. This paper argues that the institutions, assumptions, and habits that the international refugee protection system has developed over the past forty years hinder our understanding of local integration as a fundamentally political and refugee- and host-driven process. The paper uses African case studies to show how local integration is part of broader processes of local politics. It proposes alternatives to three key assumptions of conventional policy-oriented approaches to local integration: (1) that local integration is a form of local politics rather than institutionalizable process for an exceptional category of people (e.g., refugees); (2) that local integration is negotiated by refugees based on a range of legitimacy claims and forms of exchange rather than primarily based on “refugee rights”-related claims; and (3) that local integration is enabled by hosts for a variety of reasons rather than mainly for reasons related to the idea of “refugee protection.” https://refuge.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/refuge/article/view/32081 |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Tara Polzer |
spellingShingle |
Tara Polzer Negotiating Rights: Th e Politics of Local Integration Refuge |
author_facet |
Tara Polzer |
author_sort |
Tara Polzer |
title |
Negotiating Rights: Th e Politics of Local Integration |
title_short |
Negotiating Rights: Th e Politics of Local Integration |
title_full |
Negotiating Rights: Th e Politics of Local Integration |
title_fullStr |
Negotiating Rights: Th e Politics of Local Integration |
title_full_unstemmed |
Negotiating Rights: Th e Politics of Local Integration |
title_sort |
negotiating rights: th e politics of local integration |
publisher |
York University Libraries |
series |
Refuge |
issn |
0229-5113 1920-7336 |
publishDate |
2011-04-01 |
description |
Advocacy campaigns against the “warehousing” of refugees in camps suggest the facilitation of local integration as a preferred policy option for states, international organizations, and non-governmental organizations. This paper argues that the institutions, assumptions, and habits that the international refugee protection system has developed over the past forty years hinder our understanding of local integration as a fundamentally political and refugee- and host-driven process. The paper uses African case studies to show how local integration is part of broader processes of local politics. It proposes alternatives to three key assumptions of conventional policy-oriented approaches to local integration: (1) that local integration is a form of local politics rather than institutionalizable process for an exceptional category of people (e.g., refugees); (2) that local integration is negotiated by refugees based on a range of legitimacy claims and forms of exchange rather than primarily based on “refugee rights”-related claims; and (3) that local integration is enabled by hosts for a variety of reasons rather than mainly for reasons related to the idea of “refugee protection.”
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https://refuge.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/refuge/article/view/32081 |
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