Abstract

Refugees dominate contemporary headlines. The migration “emergencies” at the southern U.S. border and the southern borders of the European Union, as well as the “crisis” in the Bay of Bengal, have drawn global attention to the dire inadequacies of the international refugee regime, even as extended through various principles of non-refoulement, in governing modern migration flows. Political responses to these mass movements, from the Brexit vote to the election of Donald Trump and his executive order halting the refugee resettlement process in the United States, have threatened the viability of refugee law's protections. At the policy level, numerous high-level stakeholders have convened in different constellations, through the United Nationsand other bodies; manycommentatorsagree that these meetings have accomplished little thus far in terms of law reform. The refugee law paradigm consumes so much space in the imagination of international lawyers and policymakers that it is hard even to begin to conceptualize an alternate approach to global migration law. The fear of losing even the narrow ground staked out to protect refugees stiffens the resistance to change. Proposals for reform tend to follow the tired old path of suggesting ways in which the refugee definition can be expanded to include new groups of migrants (ranging from climate change refugees to anyone fleeing serious human rights abuses) rather than critically evaluating the structure of global migration law more broadly.

Highlights

  • MOVING BEYOND THE REFUGEE LAW PARADIGMThis essay engages with the structural flaws created by international refugee law in an effort to begin to chart a new path forward for global migration law

  • Numerous highlevel stakeholders have convened in different constellations, through the United Nations and other bodies;[3] many commentators agree that these meetings have accomplished little far in terms of law reform.[4]

  • The refugee law paradigm consumes so much space in the imagination of international lawyers and policymakers that it is hard even to begin to conceptualize an alternate approach to global migration law

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Summary

MOVING BEYOND THE REFUGEE LAW PARADIGM

This essay engages with the structural flaws created by international refugee law in an effort to begin to chart a new path forward for global migration law. It focuses on three central problems produced by migration law’s. Most solutions ignore crucial economic dimensions of migration, focusing instead on either criminalization of movement through a smuggling/trafficking frame or charitable humanitarianism through a refugee law frame This shapes the conversation in ways that are unhelpful both for migrants and for migrant-receiving countries, and, as has been vividly demonstrated of late on the world stage, limits the effectiveness of migration law regimes, which are subject to being overwhelmed by mass movements of people. Setting Priorities in Livelihoods Research and Education for Refugees in the Middle East, CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS REPORT 20–21 (2015), for a brief discussion of the history of the Refugee Convention, which I argue “conceptualized refugees as laborers, either in wage-earning employment, self-employment, or the liberal professions.” This was exemplified by the U.S representative to the drafting conference for the Convention, who stated that “without the right to work all other rights were meaningless.”

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Moving Beyond the Refugee Law Paradigm
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