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Vol. 26 No. 2 (2011): No Borders As Practical Politics
Vol. 26 No. 2 (2011): No Borders As Practical Politics
Published:
2011-04-21
Full Issue
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Front Matter
Front Matter
1-2
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Editorial
A Note from the Editor
Sharry J. Aiken
3-4
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Introduction
Editorial: Why No Borders?
Bridget Anderson, Nandita Sharma, Cynthia Wright
5-18
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Feature Articles
Stateless Citizenship and the Palestinian-Arabs in Israel
Shourideh C Molavi
19-28
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Borders, Labour Impacts, and Union Responses: Case of Spain
Luke Stobart
29-40
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Borders of Solidarity: Life in Displacement in the Amazon Tri-Border Region
Carolina Moulin
41-54
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Moving Beyond English as a Requirement to "Fit In": Considering Refugee and Migrant Education in South Australia
Clemence Due, Damien Riggs
55-64
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Migrant Illegality, Nation Building, and the Politics of Regularization in Canada
Jean McDonald
65-77
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Differential Criminalization under Operation Streamline: Challenges to Freedom of Movement and Humanitarian Aid Provision in the Mexico-US Borderlands
Andrew Burridge
78-91
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Negotiating Rights: The Politics of Local Integration
Tara Polzer
92-106
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Whose “No Borders”? Achieving Border Liberalization for the Right Reasons
Nick Gill
107-120
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Residency Documents for All! Notes to Understand the Movement of Migrants in Barcelona
Amarela Varela
121-132
(limited-accessibility).PDF
General Articles
“I Have a Voice—Hear Me!” Findings of an Australian Study Examining the Resettlement and Integration Experience of Refugees and Migrants from the Horn of Africa in Australia
Eileen Pittaway, Chrisanta Muli, Sarah Shteir
133-146
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Domestic Violence and Gender-Based Persecution: How Refugee Adjudicators Judge Women Seeking Refuge from Spousal Violence—and Why Reform Is Needed
Constance MacIntosh
147-164
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Un/Convention(al) Refugees: Contextualizing the Accounts of Refugees Facing Homophobic or Transphobic Persecution
Sharalyn R. Jordan
165-182
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Siting Sudaneseness: Territory, Practice, and Identity in Aragi
Bjorn Curley
183-190
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Refugees Who Arrive by Boat and Canada’s Commitment to the Refugee Convention: A Discursive Analysis
Alexandra Mann
191-206
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Creating Higher Burdens: The Presumption of State Protection in Democratic Countries
Jamie Chai Yun Liew
207-221
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Book Reviews
Melancholy Order: Asian Migration and the Globalization of Borders by Adam McKeown
Radhika Mongia
222-223
(limited-accessibility).PDF
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Keywords
refugee return
soviet union
political repression
chechen-russian conflict
chechen republic
refugee flow
moscow
men
elders
burden sharing
crises
trade
policies
responsibility sharing
safe areas
fiscal burden sharing
resource extraction
unro
bedouin
negev
russian immigrants