The latest issue of the International Journal of Refugee Law (IJRL) has been published. Contents of vol. 34, nos. 3-4, Oct.-Dec. 2022 include:
- Utterly Unbelievable: The Discourse of ‘Fake’ SOGI Asylum Claims as a Form of Epistemic Injustice [open access]
- Statelessness, Inability or Unwillingness to Return, and the ‘Country of His Former Habitual Residence’ as the Country of Reference for the Purposes of Article 1A(2) of the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees [abstract]
- Trafficked Adult Males as (Un)Gendered Protection Seekers: Between Presumption of Invulnerability and Exclusion from Membership of a Particular Social Group [abstract]
- What Can Artificial Intelligence Do for Refugee Status Determination? A Proposal for Removing Subjective Fear [open access]
- Health Emergency and Asylum Law in the European Union [open access]
- On the Removal of Asylum Seekers to Third Countries and the Scope of the EU–Turkey Readmission Agreement [abstract]
In addition, readers will find 1) the keynote address given at the 2022 Refugee Law Initiative Conference; 2) case law summaries; 3) the texts of the UNHCR Guidelines on International Legal Standards relating to Decent Work for Refugees, the Note on International Protection from the 73rd session of EXCOM, and the Conclusion on International Protection and Durable Solutions in the Context of a Public Health Emergency; and 4) three book reviews.
Tagged Periodicals.
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