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25 June 2024

New Issue of JRS

The latest issue of Journal of Refugee Studies (JRS) has been published. Contents of vol. 37, no. 2, June 2024 include:

Original articles
  • Humanitarian hacking: Merging refugee aid and digital capitalism [free full-text]
  • Beyond victim and hero representations? A comparative analysis of UNHCR’s Instagram communication strategies for the Syrian and Ukrainian crises [open access
  • Adaptive religious coping with experiences of sexual and gender-based violence and displacement [open access]
  • Child marriage and displacement: A qualitative study of displaced and host populations in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq [open access]
  • Reflections on arts-based research methods in refugee mental health: The role of creative exercises in nurturing positive coping with trauma and exile [abstract]
  • How Rohingya refugee parents support children’s prosocial development in crisis-affected and resettlement contexts: Findings from India and Canada [abstract]
  • There seems to be some disparity then between our Syrian and Iraqi refugee children who seemed to have everything’: Constructing ‘good refugees’ and the ensuing equity issues in Australian schools [abstract]
  • Multilevel governance ‘from above’: Analysing Colombia’s system of co-responsibility for responding to internal displacement [open access
  • How do perceptions, fears, and experiences of violence and conflict affect considerations of moving internally and internationally? [open access]
  • Temporary turn in the asylum regime and the deportable refugee: The case of Syrians in Türkiye [abstract]
  • Using forced migration to foster emergence? International aid and development policies in Cameroon [abstract]
  • Refugee livelihood perspectives: Post-traumatic growth in histories of Vietnamese, Bosnian, and Tamil Refugees in Australia [open access]
  • South African attitudes towards refugee settlement: Examining the importance of threat perceptions [open access]
  • Changing tactics in negotiating refugee assistance policies and practices: A case study of an asylum seeker-led organization in Hong Kong [abstract]
  • Multi-scalar and diasporic integration: Kurdish populations in Europe between state, diaspora and geopolitics [open access]
  • Disciplining subjectivity in Australian migrant deterrence campaigns [abstract]
  • The EU’s normative justifications of refugee resettlement [open access]

Field Reflections
  • Coproducing a film resource for asylum seekers in the UK—A field reflection [open access]
  • Building an ethical research culture: Scholars of refugee background researching refugee-related issues [open access]
  • En route to decoloniality—A different light on Northern research on urban refugees in Southern contexts: A case from Jordan [abstract]

Six reviews are also included.

Tagged Periodicals.

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