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Refugees and Forced Migration in the Horn and Eastern Africa

Edited by Johannes Dragsbaek Schmidt, Leah Kimathi and Michael Omondi Owiso

in Advances in African Economic, Social and Political Development from Springer, currently edited by Diery Seck, Juliet Elu and Yaw Nyarko

Date: 2019
ISBN: 978-3-030-03721-5
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Chapters in this book:

Researching Refugees and Forced Migration in Eastern and Horn of Africa: Introducing the Issues
Johannes Dragsbæk Schmidt, Leah Kimathi and Michael Omondi Owiso
Refugee Hosting and Conflict Resolution: Opportunities for Diplomatic Interventions and Buffeting Regional Hegemons
Dulo Nyaoro
The Greater Horn of Africa: Geopolitical Aspects of the “Refugee Crisis”
Bjørn Møller
The Securitization of Humanitarian Aid: A Case Study of the Dadaab Refugee Camp in Kenya
Leah Kimathi
Securitization of Kenya’s Asylum Space: Origin and Legal Analysis of the Encampment Policy
Andrew Maina
Regional Integration by Military Means: The Case of the East African Standby Force
Thomas Mandrup
Refugee Undesirability and Economic Potentials: Questioning Encampment Policy in Forced Migration
Elias O. Opongo
The Merowe Dam in Northern Sudan: A Case of Population Displacement and Impoverishment
Iman A. I. Ahmed
The Global and Local Politics of Refugee Management in the Horn: Ethiopian Refugee Policy and Eritrean Refugee Agency
Jennifer Riggan and Amanda Poole
The Counter-Trafficking in Persons’ Architecture in Kenya: A Security Governance Perspective
Michael Omondi Owiso
Protection of Cross-Border Victims of Natural Disasters and Displacement in East Africa
Alvin Attalo and Victor Nyamori
From Co-option, Coercion to Refoulement: Why the Repatriation of Refugees from Kenyan Refugee Camps Is Neither Voluntary Nor Dignified
Dulo Nyaoro
“We Cannot Manage This Plight Alone Anymore”: Analysing the Kenyan Threats to Forcibly Repatriate All Somali Refugees from Dadaab Camp
Cristiano D’Orsi
State Sovereignty vs. Refugees’ Resilience: Repatriation, Securitization, and Transnationalism in Dadaab
Abdulkadir Osman Farah
Forging Associations Across Multiple Spaces: How Somali Kinship Practices Sustain the Existence of the Dadaab Camps in Kenya
Fred Nyongesa Ikanda

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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:aaespd:978-3-030-03721-5

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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-03721-5

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