refugees, asylum, forced migration, Canada, resettlement, global displacement, protection, integration, policy
Skip to main content
Skip to main navigation menu
Skip to site footer
Open Menu
Home
About
About the Journal
Abstracting and Indexing Services
ORCID iD
Editorial Team
Privacy Statement
Contact
Current
Archives
Submissions
Author Guidelines
Special Issue Proposal Guidelines
Book Reviewer Guidelines
Announcements
Announcements and Calls for Papers
Newsletter
Opportunities at Refuge
Open Access & Accessibility
Search
Register
Login
Home
/
Archives
/
Vol. 39 No. 2 (2023): Special Issue: Refugees and Bureaucratic Violence
Vol. 39 No. 2 (2023): Special Issue: Refugees and Bureaucratic Violence
Published:
2023-12-11
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
(limited-accessibility).PDF
Introduction
Unmasking the Impact of Bureaucratic Violence
Nina Gren, Dalia Abdelhady, Martin Joormann
1-13
(limited-accessibility).PDF
XML
Articles
“A Total Black Hole”: How COVID-19 Increased Bureaucratic Violence Against Refugees in Greece
Raluca Bejan, Tracy Glynn
1-18
(limited-accessibility).PDF
XML
Multiple Encounters: Queer Migrants and Bureaucratic Violence
Isadora Lins França, Bruno Nzinga Ribeiro
1-16
(limited-accessibility).PDF
XML
Fragmentation of Hope through Tiny Acts of Bureaucratic Cruelty - Another Kind of War on Afghan People Seeking Asylum in Sweden
Torun Elsrud
1-17
(limited accessibility).PDF
XML
Waiting in Captivity: Slow Borders, Predatory Bureaucracies, and the Necrotemporality of Asylum Deterrence
Carlos Martinez
1-17
(limited-accessibility).PDF
XML
“They Stopped the Lives of Others”: Stateless Palestinians Facing Bureaucratic Violence in Sweden
Anna Lundberg
1-16
(limited-accessibility).PDF
XML
General Articles
Autism in the Context of Humanitarian Emergency: The Lived Experiences of Syrian Refugee Mothers of Children on the Autism Spectrum
Abdullah Bernier, Adam McCrimmon, Sumaya Nsair, Henna Hans
1-21
(limited accessibility).PDF
XML
The Principle of Substitution: The Argentine Contribution to Private Sponsorship Schemes?
Ana Irene Rovetta Cortés
1-17
(limited accessibility).PDF
XML
Making Your Own Weather: Self-Reliance and Working for Resettlement Among Sudanese Refugee Men in Amman, Jordan
Zoë Jordan
1-14
(limited accessibility).PDF
XML
Changes in Shared Decision-Making Roles and Perceived Stress in Syrian Refugee Parents Resettled in the Greater Toronto Area
Maria Boulos, Michaela Hynie, Shauna Spirling, Hala Tamim
1-21
(limited accessibility).PDF
XML
What to Pack? The Semiotics of Be-Longing(s) of Syrian Displaced Women
Fadia F. Suyoufie, Abdullah M. Dagamseh
1-18
(limited accessibility).PDF
XML
Sisters-in-Waiting: A Case Study of Displaced Syrian Women Fostering New Senses and Memories of Home in Lebanon
Ibtissam Ouaali, Esther Miedema
1-16
(limited accessibility).PDF
XML
Perceived Discrimination and Poverty among Syrian Refugee Women in Jordan
Jennifer M.K. Hartmann, Trena I. Mukherjee, Maysa Khadra, Neeraj Kaushal, Nabila El-Bassel, Anindita Dasgupta
1-14
(limited accessibility).PDF
XML
Book Reviews
Climate Changed: Refugee Border Stories and the Business of Misery. By Daniel Briggs, New York: Routledge, 2020. pp. 224
Raúl Gualtruzzi
1-2
(limited accessibility).PDF
XML
Refugees, Interculturalism and Education, M. Catarci, M. Prata Gomes & S. Siqueira (eds.), Routledge, 2020, pp. 186
Roula Kitsiou
1-4
(limited accessibility).PDF
XML
Strangers to Neighbours: Refugee Sponsorship in Context. S. Labman & G. Cameron (Eds.). McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2020, 337 pp.
Parisa Azari
1-3
(limited-accessibility).PDF
XML
Refugee Law and Durability of Protection: Temporary Residence and Cessation of Status. By Maria O’Sullivan. Routledge, 2019, 243 pp.
Maria Gkogkaki
1-3
(limited-accessibility).PDF
XML
twitter
Tweets by RefugeJournal
Language
English
Français
Make a Submission
Make a Submission
Keywords
refugee return
soviet union
political repression
chechen republic
north caucasus migration
moscow
economic reform
psychological risk factors
men
elders
crises
trade
policies
unro
unprofor
bedouin
negev
separation