Serious International Crimes, Human Rights, and Forced Migration

Serious International Crimes, Human Rights, and Forced Migration

Simeon, James C.

Taylor & Francis Ltd

02/2022

394

Dura

Inglês

9780367556235

15 a 20 dias

766

Descrição não disponível.
Foreword - Sir Howard Morrison, QC

Introduction

1. Irreparable harm: serious international crimes, breaches in fundamental human rights and human dignity, and forced migration

Part 1: Examining the Fundamental Interrelationships with Serious International Crimes, Human Rights and Forced Migration

2. International crimes, international outlaws and the interface between ICL and IRL

3. Legal implications of the "presumption of innocence" and the exclusion clauses in international protection cases: the European law perspective

4. The "generalized risk" exception in Canadian refugee determination

5. Violations of fundamental human rights, serious international crimes, and the prosecution of those who have been excluded from refugee protection

Part 2: Comparative and National Studies of Serious International Crimes, Human Rights, and Forced Migration

6. Inadmissibility on security-related grounds under Section 34(1)(f ) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act: a reconsideration

7. Falling between the cracks of cornerstones: challenging the detention of asylum seekers on identity grounds

8. International crimes, refugee 'prisoner' swaps and duplicity in Australia's refugee admissions

9. The application of Article 1F UNCSR in international protection decision making in Ireland in the context of EU and international law

10. The European refugee crisis and its human rights impact on forced migrants in Greece

Part 3: Assessing and Challenging the International Legal Order and Moving Forward

11. Ethnic cleansing and exclusion

12. Staged interpretation of Article 1F(b) - 'serious non-political crime outside the country of refuge prior to [his or her] admission to that country as a refugee' - a periaktos, scene setting problem?

13. Forced displacement as a crime against humanity: can the Rohingya criminal case at the ICC bring any justice to the Syrian refugees?

14. When border control operations become crimes against humanity

Conclusions

15. Explicating the interrelationships between and among serious international crimes, human rights and human dignity, and forced migration
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Serious International Crimes;Human Rights;Forced Migration;Human Dignity;Atrocity Crimes;International Refugee Law;Crimes Against Humanity;International Humanitarian Law;the Law of Armed Conflict;Humanitarian Law;Article 1F;Exclusion Clause;Rome Statute;IRL;Refugee Protection;ICL;International Crimes;Subsidiary Protection;ICC Statute;Asylum Seekers;Young Men;UK Supreme Court;RSD;Refugee Convention;International Criminal Justice;Non-political Crime;Habitual Residence;Refugee Status;Immigration Detention;Van Sliedregt;Forced Displacement;International Protection