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Download fileThe right to asylum: a hidden history
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posted on 2023-07-07, 06:59 authored by KD NeumannDrawing on Australian examples, this chapter explores twentieth- and twenty-first-century debates about the right to grant asylum (referred to here as the ‘right of asylum’) and the right to seek, enjoy and be granted asylum (the ‘right to asylum’). It argues that in many countries, including Australia, the right to asylum—as contemplated, for example, by the drafters of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights—no longer features in public debate. Instead, the rights of asylum seekers are discussed in terms of the 1951 Refugee Convention, and discussions about asylum tend to be informed by international refugee law, rather than by international human rights law.
History
Chapter number
11Pagination
191-208Publisher DOI
Open access
- Yes
ISBN-13
978-3-319-97122-3Language
engPublication classification
B1 Book chapterCopyright notice
2019, The AuthorExtent
12Editor/Contributor(s)
Henrich E, Simpson JMPublisher
Palgrave MacmillanPlace of publication
Cham, SwitzerlandTitle of book
History, historians and the immigration debate: going back to where we came fromUsage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedKeywords
ImmigrantsMigrationEmigrationSocial HistoryPublic Historynation-buildinghuman mobilityIndia/Pakistan partitionethnic pluralismmulticulturalism210303 Australian History (excl Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander History)970118 Expanding Knowledge in Law and Legal StudiesSchool of Humanities and Social Sciences4303 Historical studies