Contesting the Universality of the Refugee Convention: Decolonization and the Additional Protocol

IF 2.2 2区 社会学 Q1 DEMOGRAPHY
Itty Abraham
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Recent scholarship has insightfully explored the colonial roots of the UN Refugee Convention of 1951. In this work I seek to extend this line of argument by situating the adoption of the Additional Protocol of the Refugee Convention (1967) in relation to the transformations of international order following the Second World War. Contra the conventional account, this article shows that the Additional Protocol was created in no small part due to fears that the UN Refugee Convention would be unable to claim universal status due to competing ‘regional’ refugee conventions. Breaking down four meanings of ‘universal’ and drawing on archival documents of the Organization of African Unity (OAU), the Asian-African Legal Consultative Committee and the United Nations High Commission for Refugees, I explore efforts by newly independent African and Asian countries to find voice in an exclusionary international order. Reading the Bangkok Principles and OAU Convention as collective subaltern resistance against efforts to discipline newly independent states offers new insights into contemporary international struggles and brings refugee studies into productive dialogue with critical international relations.
质疑《难民公约:非殖民化和附加议定书》的普遍性
最近的学术研究深刻地探讨了1951年联合国难民公约的殖民根源。在本书中,我试图通过将《难民公约附加议定书》(1967年)的通过与第二次世界大战后国际秩序的变化联系起来来扩展这一论点。与传统的说法相反,这篇文章表明,附加议定书的创建在很大程度上是由于担心联合国难民公约由于竞争的“区域”难民公约而无法获得普遍地位。我分解了“普遍”的四种含义,并借鉴了非洲统一组织(非统组织)、亚非法律协商委员会和联合国难民事务高级专员公署的档案文件,探讨了新独立的非洲和亚洲国家在排他性的国际秩序中寻找声音的努力。将《曼谷原则》和《非统组织公约》解读为对新独立国家进行纪律约束的集体次等抵抗,为当代国际斗争提供了新的见解,并将难民研究与关键的国际关系带入富有成效的对话。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
5.90%
发文量
58
期刊介绍: Journal of Refugee Studies provides a forum for exploration of the complex problems of forced migration and national, regional and international responses. The Journal covers all categories of forcibly displaced people. Contributions that develop theoretical understandings of forced migration, or advance knowledge of concepts, policies and practice are welcomed from both academics and practitioners. Journal of Refugee Studies is a multidisciplinary peer-reviewed journal, and is published in association with the Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford.
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