In other words, most of the displaced people in the post-Soviet East are destined for neither. Global North attitudes towards mass forms of displacement and displacement in several countries in the post-Soviet space, including Tajikistan, Ukraine and Georgia.
Janus Faced Migration Policymaking
A Case Study of Afghan-European Migration Policy
Castles' summary of migration policies in the post-war period describes the many failures of. A Case Study of Afghan-European Migration Policy 19 The European Parliament clearly saw the JWF as an example of the latter.
Higher Education Concerns for Young Afghan Refugees in Delhi
Higher Education Concerns for Young Afghan Refugees in Delhi 39 The German Embassy annually places DAFI scholars in India. Higher education concerns for young Afghan refugees in Delhi 41 Afghan refugees to meet the demands of the Indian higher education system.
The Necropolitics of Canada’s Afghan Resettlement Programmes
Kushan Azadah *
As Mbembe explains: “the ultimate expression of sovereignty lies, to a large extent, in the power and capacity to dictate who can live and who must die. It illustrates the ways in which the state profoundly reconfigures "the relations between resistance, sacrifice and terror".69. 5 Robert Fife and Janice Dickson, "'My life is in danger': Afghans are being tortured by the Taliban as they wait for Canada to act," The Globe and Mail, May 10, 2022, https://www.theglobeandmail.com/politics/ article-afghan-interpreter-taliban- torture/.
16Anthony Fong and Zamir Saar, “Canada should be as welcoming to Afghan refugees as it is to Ukrainians,” The Conversation, May 25, 2022. 17Janice Dickson and Michelle Carbert, “Justin Trudeau says it is 'utterly horrifying' that the Taliban are targeting on Afghans who worked for Canada,” The Globe and Mail, May 12, 2022, https://www.theglobeandmail.com/politics/article -justin-trudeau-zegt-dat-de-taliban-volkomen-awful-is/. Eurozine, February 9, 2022, https://www.eurozine.com/life-as-death/; Salman Hussain, "The 'Ethical' Framework for Counterinsurgency: International Law of War and Cultural Knowledge in the 'U.S.
45Nicholas Keung, “Canada moves away from 72-hour timeline for Afghans who worked with military to apply for asylum,” The Toronto Star, July 28, 2021, https://www.thestar.com/news/canada they-waited-and-waited-for-the-good-news-now-Canada-is-giving-Afghan-civilians-who-worked-with-its-army-72-hours-to-apply-for-sanctuary.html.
Misogynist Norms and Women’s Resistance Movements in Afghanistan
The Taliban ideology was a mixture of Pashtunwali, Deobandi and Saudi-influenced Islam.3 The Taliban and JUI were financed by the Saudi Wahabbis. The members of the Taliban had different views regarding the capture of the city. The warlords also fought hard to limit the expansion of the Taliban in the region.
Women were not allowed to wash clothes on the banks of the river without a male guardian. Misogynistic Norms and Women's Resistance Movements in Afghanistan 67 their livelihoods to survive despite the Taliban's threats to the women to stay indoors. They were in the most vulnerable situation, often forced into marriage, human trafficking and prostitution.20 The return of the Taliban.
11Kim Berry, "The Symbolic Use of Afghan Women in the War on Terror," Humboldt Journal of Social Relations 27, nr.
Understanding the Plight in Ukraine: How Humanitarian and Food Crises Impact
International Security?
With the end of the Cold War, the nature and character of armed conflicts underwent several changes. This is linked to ethnic strife and the eventual polarization of society, politics and the economy as a whole. It is currently going through a series of crises - climate change, the consequences of the pandemic and the ongoing war in Ukraine -.
The economic outlook in the world had not been favorable due to the pandemic and its effect on supply chains. With the beginning of the conflict and the subsequent energy crisis, the cost of living has increased. This situation further reinforces the argument that the state's commitment to realizing the SDGs is capricious at best.
An important point here is that the destabilization of the economy and the polarization of society go hand in hand.
Report
As the West Goes to War, Crafting Peace Question Today
Marcello Musto, Paula Banerjee, Ranabir Samaddar, Sandro Mezzadra *
A resolution passed at its founding congress had maintained peace as "the indispensable precondition of any emancipation of the workers." With the rise of fascism and the outbreak of World War II, violence escalated even further. It must recognize the faults within the "politics of peace", the contentious nature of the issue of peace today.
In the neoliberal era, there is often no question of a 'just war' and countries in the South can only be on the side of peace. Recall that India and the USSR had a rupee-ruble agreement on bilateral trade in the 1970s. This is the new reality in which the financial power of the West plays a central role.
The Global South can and must refuse to be part of the global power game.
Ukraine War Refugees and Human Rights in a Global Context
Alex Aleinikoff, Ayşe Çağlar , Grażyna Baranowska, Olena Fedyuk, Randall Hansen *
- Ayşe Çağlar: Where do we locate the commonalities between those groups displaced from Ukraine and those displaced in other parts of the
- Ayşe Çağlar: By adopting a common legal framework (temporary protection) and allowing Ukrainians fleeing Ukraine to cross EU
- Ayşe Çağlar: There is an emphasis placed on the cultural and religious characteristics of the people fleeing wars in public debates on
- Ayşe Çağlar: These legal frameworks show the complexity concerning the Ukrainian refugees in Poland and that they are better
And if there is a transformation in the making, which today can be considered a hint to the future. Ukraine War Refugees and Human Rights in a Global Context 107 What we have now seen in the EU context is a massive role of private sponsorship and assistance. I don't think you will see it globally, but it can develop regionally, as it seems to have happened in the EU vis-à-vis Ukrainians.
Everywhere, the vast majority of refugees are not fleeing persecution as they did in the 1930s (when, for example, a German-Jewish professor was fired for being Jewish), but instead from invading armies. At the same time, despite the huge refugee flows, most European countries have opened their borders – that is, suspended them completely. Poland has a 500 km long border with Ukraine and 400 km with Belarus, both of which have received a lot of attention in the past year.
Field practice pushed them back and based on domestic laws within weeks.
Kolkata Declaration 2021
A Post-Colonial Engagement
Debasree Sarkar *
These issues created a context for the Temporary Protection Directive (a 2001 European Union directive), but amazingly, the directive was only activated in the immediate aftermath of the Ukrainian crisis. Liza Schuster was asked to be one of the technical advisers to the Ministry of Refugees and Return. Nasreen Chowdhory made her comments on the relevance of the Kolkata Declaration and the ongoing refugee crisis.
In this context, the Kolkata Declaration was created, reflecting on the needs of the times, and especially the realities of post-colonial societies. Kolkata Declaration 2021: A post-colonial commitment 119 The instrumental power of the state to deprive people of their nationality, deprive them of their rights and drive them out of the realm of protection. Such an image is created on the basis of a preconceived notion of those who should be excluded from the rights of citizenship.
The vast majority of the refugee population, at least two-thirds, are of working age.
Book Review
Arc of the Journeyman: A Humane Expedition to the Quotidian Lives of
Afghan Migrants in England
Set in Sussex, it discusses the mobility and labor power of taxi drivers, which in a wider transnational context is linked to their cultural practices and kinship relations. The main motive behind families sending their sons to distant countries is their expectation that the latter can maintain the economic stability of the household back in Pakistan and Afghanistan, helping to shape their lives amid the sufferings of war and deprivation. Chapter 2 draws attention to the Pakistani side of the transnational context of Pashtun migrants, taking the chakar (a pleasure trip undertaken mainly by male friends that includes food and other leisure) as an analytical lens to explore mobility in a broader theoretical way.
Khan understands these conditions by applying dominant anthropological theories to the ethnographic context of the Sussex migrant population, as well as subclinical and psychiatric methods. Khan's is a humane portrayal of the fringe transnational lives designed by global inequality, fractures and liminality. It tells the extensive history and politics of Gulzai and Shinzada groups, two divisions of the city's Pashtuns, organized around two families, and delves deeply into the complexities of collective mobilization and immobility in the migrant landscape.
This book is the result of Nichole Khan's bold effort to present an alternative depiction of the lives of the Afghan population as a dynamic and contingent force against the stereotypical colonial narratives of Pashtun traditionalism and obscurantism.
Book Review Surviving War
Past, Present and Imagined Futures
Anup Shekhar Chakraborty *
Instead, this book presents a mix of collective efforts in war-torn geographies: changing moral masculinity and disability rights movements, organizing anti-war programs, popular education campaigns, providing social services and loss prevention initiatives, and rebuilding trust in a new political ecology of uncertainty. Afghanistan is the only country in the world with the dubious distinction of having been invaded by all three major powers – the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union and the United States – in the last 150 years. Afghanistan's turbulent transition from traditional Islam to extremism is deeply rooted in the Taliban's ideology.
This book examines the merchant warlords who have adopted new forms of leadership in Afghanistan, as well as the dynamic political economy of Afghanistan. Book Review 129 the country, using the example of the changes that have occurred in Kabul and Afghan politics after the year 2001. To illustrate the new political ecology of insecurities at the margins, the contributors have thoroughly examined the situation of the Bardakhshanis in Afghanistan since the Saur Revolution, as well as Hazara Civil Society Activists and Balochs.
The reader will gain a deeper understanding of the complex geopolitics behind the return of the Taliban to Afghanistan, as well as the changes in the Taliban's operations and their confrontation with the quest for legitimacy of power and authority, governance and statecraft.
NOTES FOR CONTRIBUTORS
REFUGEE WATCH