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15 April 2020

Thematic Focus: Law/Policy Items - Pt. 1

Opportunities:

Scholarships:  MA in Refugee Protection and Forced Migration Studies, Refugee Law Initiative [info]

- Ten full Commonwealth Scholarships available for accepted participants in MA course. Note: The application deadline has been extended to 4 May 2020.

CFP: Forced Migration Review [info]
- Contributions sought for a themed issue on "Recognising Refugees." The submission deadline is 15 June 2020.

Blog posts & press:

Counterterrorism and Humanitarian Action: Will 2020 Be a Turning Point for International Humanitarian Law at the United Nations? (Lawfare Blog, March 2020) [text]

Internal Displacement is not an Acceptable Alternative to International Protection (IDMC Blog, March 2020) [text]

International Migration and Refugee Law in Times of Health Crisis: When Movement is Restricted and Social Distancing is Impossible (International Law under Construction Blog, April 2020) [text]

Symposium on COVID-19 and International Law: Introduction (OpinioJuris Blog, March-April 2020) [text]
- Note: The entire symposium is available as a PDF. See esp. "COVID-19 and Migrants–Gaps in the International Legal Architecture?"

Research project:

PROTECT: The Right to International Protection [info] [Twitter]
- Aim of this project is to "study the impacts of the United Nations’ ‘Global Refugee Compact’ and ‘Global Migration Compact’ on the functioning of the international refugee protection system." 

Reports & books:

The Lawyer and the Refugee: A Talk Given on Receiving the Stefan A. Riesenfeld Memorial Award, Berkeley, CA, 28 Feb. 2020 [text]

Legal Considerations on the Right for Refugees to Hold and Express Political Opinions in Their Country of Asylum (UNHCR, March 2020) [text]

Migration Issues before International Courts and Tribunals (CNR Edizioni, 2019; posted Feb. 2020) [open access]
- "The volume collects 16 contributions on the role of international Courts and Tribunals in the development and/or application of migration law, fostering a dialogical approach among scholars, experts and policy makers in addressing relevant issues of judicial practice in the field. Special attention is paid throughout the volume to issues of human rights, given their centrality in international adjudication on migration and refugee law in times of crisis (suffice it to mention massive movements of people at sea, as well as de facto or de iure emergency situations in Europe and beyond)."

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