Journal
PROGRESS IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
Volume 45, Issue 1, Pages 88-110Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0309132519900925
Keywords
asylum; displacement; Gulf States; humanitarianism; refuge; refugees
Categories
Ask authors/readers for more resources
This article discusses why some spaces of refuge are excluded from global maps of forced migration, highlighting the partiality of current refuge geography based on Western legal norms. It argues that focusing on alternative refuge locations and forms is crucial for understanding forced migration accurately and challenging dominant moral geographies of asylum and responsibility-sharing.
This article explores why certain spaces of refuge continue to be excised from global maps of forced migration. It first reviews why this exclusion happens, before synthesising work on the movements of forced migrants to states that are not signatories to the dominant refugee law frameworks. This exposes the partiality of geographies of refuge that rest on Western legal-normative conceptualisations of hospitality and humanitarianism. It argues that a focus on alternative sites and forms of refuge is nonetheless critical for 1) sketching accurate experiential and geopolitical maps of forced migration and 2) challenging dominant moral geographies of asylum and responsibility-sharing.
Authors
I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.
Reviews
Recommended
No Data Available