Towards a Refugee Oriented
Right of Asylum
by Laura Westra, Satvinder
Juss
This volume explores the
factors that give rise to the number of people seeking asylum and examines the
barriers they currently and will continue to face. Divided into three parts,
the authors first explore the causality that generates displacement, examining
climate change, illegal conflicts and the deprivation of natural resources.
They argue that all of these problems either originate from human agency
directly, or are strongly influenced by human activities, particularly those of
wealthy countries in the North West. The study goes on to discuss how migrants
are received and the problems they face on arrival, and concludes with
confronting the fate and the status of asylum seekers after arrival, and the
walls, both virtual and material, that they encounter. The authors propose ways
of approaching the situation, beyond the present language and the limited
interpretations of the Convention on the Status of Refugees. Written by leading
experts in environmental ethics, asylum law, and international law, the book
will be essential reading for those working in these and related areas.