1. Alienage; 2. Well-founded fear; 3. Serious harm; 4. Failure of state protection; 5. Nexus to civil or political status; 6. Persons no longer needing protection; 7. Persons not deserving protection.
The long-awaited second edition of this seminal text, reconceived as a critical analysis of the world's leading comparative asylum jurisprudence.
James C. Hathaway is the James E. and Sarah A. Degan Professor of Law at the University of Michigan, USA, a Distinguished Visiting Professor of International Refugee Law at the University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, and a Professorial Fellow at the University of Melbourne, Australia. Michelle Foster is an Associate Professor and Director of the International Refugee Law Research Programme in the Institute for International Law and the Humanities at Melbourne Law School.
'… a major event … The long wait is over, and all working or
studying in this area of law can begin to use and benefit from this
book's many insights, and to mine the rich seams of source
materials contained in its footnotes.' Hugo Storey, International
Journal of Refugee Law
'As with the first edition, and with acuity rare in the world of
academic writing, the text displays an uncanny knack of identifying
the really important issues of the era, before providing insightful
analysis that simply demands attention from any serious advocate or
principled decision maker.' Mark Symes, freemovement.org.uk
'… this book is bound to become an authoritative reference on the
law relative to the determination of refugee status on the basis of
the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees ('Refugee
Convention').' Benoit Mayer, Chinese Journal of International
Law
'For practitioners it is invaluable in that The Law of Refugee
Status offers a comprehensive normative framework for interpreting
the refugee definition through the prism of case law. This is, in a
way, the book's most unique characteristic. While not only useful
as a reference tool, it also represents the authors' synthesis of a
complex and vast body of jurisprudence that has developed to
respond to everevolving social realities and legal contexts in
which refugees find themselves.' Radha Govil and Alexandra McDowa,
Australian Year Book of International Law
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