The Refugee System: A Sociological Approach

David Scott FitzGerald , Rawan Arar
Passer aux renseignements sur les produits

The Refugee System: A Sociological Approach

David Scott FitzGerald , Rawan Arar
Date de sortie :
Prix habituel $31.95
Prix promotionnel $31.95 Prix habituel $0.00
Vente ferme. Aucun retour ni échange.
La livraison de cet article sera effectuée sur rendez-vous par notre transporteur partenaire.
La livraison de cet article sera effectuée sur rendez-vous par notre transporteur partenaire.

Téléchargement numérique

Accès immédiat à votre bibliothèque Kobo

Livrer à

Avertissez-moi lorsque de retour en stock

Acheter maintenant et ramasser en magasin Bay & Floor

En rupture de stock

Trouver en magasin

En rupture de stock

Trouvé dans : Community & Culture, Cultural Conversations

Obtenez 160 points plum  et profitez d’un rabais additionnel avec plum. En savoir plus

Afficher tous les renseignements

Aperçu

272 PAGESANGLAIS

Info promotionnelle

2023 Felicia Krishna Hensel Book Award ‘Honorable Mention’ from the Interdisciplinary Studies Section of the International Studies Association (ISA)

“Arar and FitzGerald offer a truly comprehensive overview of what makes people able and willing to flee violence […]. The Refugee System will be useful to undergraduate and graduate students of migration, particularly because of its accessible language and composition […]. Besides students, the book will also benefit more seasoned migration scholars looking for a theoretical synthesis of recent debates in their field.”
Ethnic and Racial Studies

“In contrast to studies that often focus on how state policies impact migrants’ decisions, the authors demonstrate how migrants shape policies.”
International Migration Review

“This book [demonstrates] the value of using a systems approach to understand the refugee system. While it is challenging to empirically measure and capture all interactions between refugee drivers, actors, states, policies, and institutions involved, the book has shown that demographic analysis can benefit from using a holistic approach in the production of knowledge about refugees.”
Raya Muttarak, Population and Development Review

“A work of brilliance, Arar and FitzGerald’s The Refugee System illuminates the phenomenon in a way that no one has done before, providing an indispensable framework for understanding the causes and consequences of forced migration as well as the ways in which states and institutions have responded when faced with people fleeing violence and persecution.”
Roger Waldinger, University of California, Los Angeles

“A rich analysis of the ways in which migrants and refugees interact with entangled legal and political regimes. Arar and FitzGerald never lose sight of the people most affected by the phenomena under discussion: refugees themselves, and their communities.​”
Laura Madokoro, Carleton University

“During the past decade, the refugee issue dominated the world's media headlines and has risen to the very top of the global policy agenda. This groundbreaking book provides a uniquely comprehensive, systematic and humane analysis of this important topic.”
Jeff Crisp, Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford

“Sociologists Arar and FitzGerald demonstrate the imperative of adopting a systems approach and expanding the general understanding of refugees beyond the restrictive legal definition to understand the politics and experiences of displacement that have shaped the world in the last three decades.”
CHOICE

“In their ambitious new book, The Refugee System, Rawan Arar and David FitzGerald set out to build a comprehensive framework through which to analyze the world’s major refugee systems. […] They propose a flexible, integrated framework of analysis that accounts for individuals, historic forces, and institutions.”
Social Forces

  • Date de publication : Dec 19, 2022
  • Langue : anglais
  • Nombre de pages : 272
  • Éditeur : Polity Press
  • ISBN : 9781509542796
  • Dimensions : 5.901574803" W x 0.799212598" L x 8.901574803" H
Rawan Arar is Assistant Professor in the Department of Law, Societies, and Justice at the University of Washington.
David Scott FitzGerald is Professor of Sociology and Co-Director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at the University of California San Diego.

Articles récemment consultés