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The Rights Of Refugees Under International Law, James C. Hathaway
The Rights Of Refugees Under International Law, James C. Hathaway
Book Chapters
The universal rights of refugees are today derived from two primary sources - general standards of international human rights law, and the Refugee Convention itself. As the analysis in Chapter 1 makes clear, the obligations derived from the Refugee Convention remain highly relevant, despite the development since 1951 of a broad-ranging system of international human rights law. In particular, general human rights norms do not address many refugee-specific concerns; general economic rights are defined as duties of progressive implementation and may legitimately be denied to non-citizens by less developed countries; not all civil rights are guaranteed to non-citizens, and most …
The Architecture Of The Un Refugee Convention And Protocol, James C. Hathaway
The Architecture Of The Un Refugee Convention And Protocol, James C. Hathaway
Book Chapters
The heart of international refugee law is the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and the 1967 Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees, with some three-quarters of the world’s governments having bound themselves to respect the standards set by these treaties. Contracting States may—and often have—accepted additional refugee protection responsibilities under national or regional law. But, as a matter of international law, these additional duties complement rather than supplant the fundamental commitments made under the Refugee Convention and Protocol.
The architecture of this core normative standard is in many ways unusual. As a formal matter, it derives …