Hardback
International Law and Migration
This collection takes stock of the important legal scholarship devoted to the multifaceted impact of international law on migration. It highlights the great diversity of the legal literature and provides a representative and didactic mapping of the key issues and rules at stake. The selected papers explore the core notions of movement, sovereignty and globalization. They also examine the complex and conflicting issues raised by alienage, citizenship and the rule of law as well as the main controversies surrounding the legal protection of migrant workers and refugees in contemporary international law.
The original introduction by the editor illuminates these important issues on this highly relevant topic.
The original introduction by the editor illuminates these important issues on this highly relevant topic.
More Information
Critical Acclaim
Contributors
Contents
More Information
This collection takes stock of the important legal scholarship devoted to the multifaceted impact of international law on migration. It highlights the great diversity of the legal literature and provides a representative and didactic mapping of the key issues and rules at stake. The selected papers explore the core notions of movement, sovereignty and globalization. They also examine the complex and conflicting issues raised by alienage, citizenship and the rule of law as well as the main controversies surrounding the legal protection of migrant workers and refugees in contemporary international law.
The original introduction by the editor illuminates these important issues on this highly relevant topic.
The original introduction by the editor illuminates these important issues on this highly relevant topic.
Critical Acclaim
‘International Law and Migration, edited by Vincent Chetail, is a timely contribution as it successfully captures the great diversity of international legal scholarship on migration.’
– Cambridge International Law Journal
– Cambridge International Law Journal
Contributors
33 articles, dating from 1975 to 2014
Contributors include: A.T. Alienikoff, J. Bhabha, L.S. Bosniak, B.S. Chimni, G.S. Goodwin-Gill, J.C. Hathaway, S.S. Juss, J.A.R. Nafziger, P.J. Spiro, D. Weissbrodt
Contributors include: A.T. Alienikoff, J. Bhabha, L.S. Bosniak, B.S. Chimni, G.S. Goodwin-Gill, J.C. Hathaway, S.S. Juss, J.A.R. Nafziger, P.J. Spiro, D. Weissbrodt
Contents
Contents:
Volume I
Acknowledgements
Introduction Vincent Chetail
PART I PEOPLES ON THE MOVE, SOVEREIGNTY AND GLOBALIZATION
1. James A.R. Nafziger (1983), ‘The General Admission of Aliens under International Law’, American Journal of International Law, 77 (4), October, 804–47
2. Guy S. Goodwin-Gill (1975), ‘The Limits of the Power of Expulsion in Public International Law’, British Yearbook of International Law, 47, 55–156
3. Colin Harvey and Robert P. Barnidge, Jr. (2007), ‘Human Rights, Free Movement, and the Right to Leave in International Law’, International Journal of Refugee Law, 19 (1), March, 1–21
4. Satvinder S. Juss (2004), ‘Free Movement and the World Order’, International Journal of Refugee Law, 16 (3), July, 289–335
5. Catherine Dauvergne (2004), ‘Sovereignty, Migration and the Rule of Law in Global Times’, The Modern Law Review, 67 (4), July, 588–615
6. Vincent Chetail (2014), ‘The Transnational Movement of Persons under General International Law – Mapping the Customary Law Foundations of International Migration Law’, in Vincent Chetail and Céline Bauloz (eds), Research Handbook on International Law and Migration, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 1–72
PART II ALIENAGE, CITIZENSHIP AND THE RULE OF LAW
7. Myres S. McDougal, Harold D. Lasswell and Lung-chu Chen (1976), ‘The Protection of Aliens from Discrimination and World Public Order: Responsibility of States Conjoined with Human Rights’, American Journal of International Law, 70 (3), July, 432–69
8. David Weissbrodt and Stephen Meili (2009), ‘Human Rights and Protection of Non-Citizens: Whither Universality and Indivisibility of Rights?’, Refugee Survey Quarterly, 28 (4), 34–58
9. Ryszard Cholewinski (2010), ‘Human Rights of Migrants: The Dawn of a New Era?’, Georgetown Immigration Law Journal, 24, 585–615
10. Cathryn Costello (2012), ‘Human Rights and the Elusive Universal Subject: Immigration Detention Under International Human Rights and EU Law’, Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies, 19 (1), Winter, 257–303
11. Andreas Fischer-Lescano, Tillman Löhr and Timo Tohidipur (2009), ‘Border Controls at Sea: Requirements under International Human Rights and Refugee Law’, International Journal of Refugee Law, 21 (2), July, 256–96
12. Jens Vedsted-Hansen (2007), ‘Migration and the Right to Family and Private Life’, in Vincent Chetail (ed.), Mondialisation migration et droits de l’homme: le droit international, en question/Globalization, migration and human rights: international law under review, Brussels: Bruylant, 689–722
13. Jacqueline Bhabha (2003), ‘“More than their Share of Sorrows”: International Migration Law and the Rights of Children’, Saint Louis University Public Law Review, 22, 253–74
14. Peter J. Spiro (2011), ‘A New International Law of Citizenship’, American Journal of International Law, 105 (4), October, 694–746 [53]
Volume II
An introduction to both volumes by the editor appears in Volume I
PART I MIGRANT WORKERS UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW
1. Rieko Karatani (2005), ‘How History Separated Refugee and Migrant Regimes: In Search of Their Institutional Origins’ International Journal of Refugee Law, 17 (3), 517–41
2. Linda S. Bosniak (2004), ‘Human Rights, State Sovereignty and the Protection of Undocumented Migrants under the International Migrant Workers Convention’, in Barbara Bogusz, Ryszard Cholewinski, Adam Cygan and Erika Szyszczak (eds), Irregular Migration and Human Rights: Theoretical, European and International Perspectives, Leiden and Boston: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 311–41
3. Antoine Pécoud and Paul de Guchteneire (2006), ‘Migration, Human Rights and the United Nations: An Investigation into the Obstacles to the UN Convention on Migrant Workers’ Rights’, Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice, 24, 241–66
4. Sandesh Sivakumaran (2004), ‘The Rights of Migrant Workers One Year on: Transformation or Consolidation?’, Georgetown Journal of International Law, 36, 113–53
5. Margaret L. Satterthwaite (2005), ‘Crossing Borders, Claiming Rights: Using Human Rights Law to Empower Women Migrant Workers’, Yale Human Rights and Development Law Journal, 8, 1–66
6. Chantal Thomas (2011), ‘Convergences and Divergences in International Legal Norms on Migrant Labor’, Comparative Labor Law and Policy Journal, 32, 405–441
7. Jennifer Gordon (2010), ‘People are not Bananas. How Immigration Differs from Trade’, Northwestern University Law Review, 104 (3), 1109–145
8. Marion Panizzon (2011), ‘Migration and Trade: Prospects for Bilateralism in the Face of Skill-Selective Mobility Laws’, Melbourne Journal of International Law, 12, 1–46
PART II REFUGEES UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW
9. Guy S. Goodwin-Gill (2008), ‘The Politics of Refugee Protection’, Refugee Survey Quarterly, 27 (1), 8–23
10. James C. Hathaway (1990), ‘A Reconsideration of the Underlying Premise of Refugee Law’, Harvard International Law Journal, 31 (1), Winter, 129–83
11. Alexander T. Aleinikoff (1992), ‘State-Centered Refugee Law: From Resettlement to Containment’, Michigan Journal of International Law, 14, Fall, 120–38
12. B.S. Chimni (1998), ‘The Geopolitics of Refugee Studies: A View from the South’, Journal of Refugee Studies, 11 (4), 350–74
13. C.J. Harvey (1999), ‘Talking about Refugee Law’, Journal of Refugee Studies, 12 (2), 101–34
14. Walter Kälin (2001), ‘Flight in Times of War’, International Review of the Red Cross, 83 (843), September, 629–50
15. Deborah E. Anker (2002), ‘Refugee Law, Gender and the Human Rights Paradigm’, Harvard Human Rights Journal, 15, 133–54
16. Alice Edwards (2005), ‘Human Rights, Refugees, and the Right “To Enjoy” Asylum’, International Journal of Refugee Law, 17 (2), 293–330
17. Hélène Lambert (2009), ‘Transnational Judicial Dialogue, Harmonization and the Common European Asylum System’, International and Comparative Law Quarterly, 58 (3), July, 519–43
18. Jane McAdam (2011), ‘Swimming Against the Tide: Why a Climate Change Displacement Treaty is Not the Answer’, International Journal of Refugee Law, 23 (1), March, 2–27
19. Vincent Chetail (2014), ‘Are Refugee Rights Human Rights? An Unorthodox Questioning of the Relations between Refugee Law and Human Rights Law’, in Ruth Rubio-Marín (ed.), Human Rights and Immigration, Chapter 1, Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 19–72
Index
Volume I
Acknowledgements
Introduction Vincent Chetail
PART I PEOPLES ON THE MOVE, SOVEREIGNTY AND GLOBALIZATION
1. James A.R. Nafziger (1983), ‘The General Admission of Aliens under International Law’, American Journal of International Law, 77 (4), October, 804–47
2. Guy S. Goodwin-Gill (1975), ‘The Limits of the Power of Expulsion in Public International Law’, British Yearbook of International Law, 47, 55–156
3. Colin Harvey and Robert P. Barnidge, Jr. (2007), ‘Human Rights, Free Movement, and the Right to Leave in International Law’, International Journal of Refugee Law, 19 (1), March, 1–21
4. Satvinder S. Juss (2004), ‘Free Movement and the World Order’, International Journal of Refugee Law, 16 (3), July, 289–335
5. Catherine Dauvergne (2004), ‘Sovereignty, Migration and the Rule of Law in Global Times’, The Modern Law Review, 67 (4), July, 588–615
6. Vincent Chetail (2014), ‘The Transnational Movement of Persons under General International Law – Mapping the Customary Law Foundations of International Migration Law’, in Vincent Chetail and Céline Bauloz (eds), Research Handbook on International Law and Migration, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 1–72
PART II ALIENAGE, CITIZENSHIP AND THE RULE OF LAW
7. Myres S. McDougal, Harold D. Lasswell and Lung-chu Chen (1976), ‘The Protection of Aliens from Discrimination and World Public Order: Responsibility of States Conjoined with Human Rights’, American Journal of International Law, 70 (3), July, 432–69
8. David Weissbrodt and Stephen Meili (2009), ‘Human Rights and Protection of Non-Citizens: Whither Universality and Indivisibility of Rights?’, Refugee Survey Quarterly, 28 (4), 34–58
9. Ryszard Cholewinski (2010), ‘Human Rights of Migrants: The Dawn of a New Era?’, Georgetown Immigration Law Journal, 24, 585–615
10. Cathryn Costello (2012), ‘Human Rights and the Elusive Universal Subject: Immigration Detention Under International Human Rights and EU Law’, Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies, 19 (1), Winter, 257–303
11. Andreas Fischer-Lescano, Tillman Löhr and Timo Tohidipur (2009), ‘Border Controls at Sea: Requirements under International Human Rights and Refugee Law’, International Journal of Refugee Law, 21 (2), July, 256–96
12. Jens Vedsted-Hansen (2007), ‘Migration and the Right to Family and Private Life’, in Vincent Chetail (ed.), Mondialisation migration et droits de l’homme: le droit international, en question/Globalization, migration and human rights: international law under review, Brussels: Bruylant, 689–722
13. Jacqueline Bhabha (2003), ‘“More than their Share of Sorrows”: International Migration Law and the Rights of Children’, Saint Louis University Public Law Review, 22, 253–74
14. Peter J. Spiro (2011), ‘A New International Law of Citizenship’, American Journal of International Law, 105 (4), October, 694–746 [53]
Volume II
An introduction to both volumes by the editor appears in Volume I
PART I MIGRANT WORKERS UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW
1. Rieko Karatani (2005), ‘How History Separated Refugee and Migrant Regimes: In Search of Their Institutional Origins’ International Journal of Refugee Law, 17 (3), 517–41
2. Linda S. Bosniak (2004), ‘Human Rights, State Sovereignty and the Protection of Undocumented Migrants under the International Migrant Workers Convention’, in Barbara Bogusz, Ryszard Cholewinski, Adam Cygan and Erika Szyszczak (eds), Irregular Migration and Human Rights: Theoretical, European and International Perspectives, Leiden and Boston: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 311–41
3. Antoine Pécoud and Paul de Guchteneire (2006), ‘Migration, Human Rights and the United Nations: An Investigation into the Obstacles to the UN Convention on Migrant Workers’ Rights’, Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice, 24, 241–66
4. Sandesh Sivakumaran (2004), ‘The Rights of Migrant Workers One Year on: Transformation or Consolidation?’, Georgetown Journal of International Law, 36, 113–53
5. Margaret L. Satterthwaite (2005), ‘Crossing Borders, Claiming Rights: Using Human Rights Law to Empower Women Migrant Workers’, Yale Human Rights and Development Law Journal, 8, 1–66
6. Chantal Thomas (2011), ‘Convergences and Divergences in International Legal Norms on Migrant Labor’, Comparative Labor Law and Policy Journal, 32, 405–441
7. Jennifer Gordon (2010), ‘People are not Bananas. How Immigration Differs from Trade’, Northwestern University Law Review, 104 (3), 1109–145
8. Marion Panizzon (2011), ‘Migration and Trade: Prospects for Bilateralism in the Face of Skill-Selective Mobility Laws’, Melbourne Journal of International Law, 12, 1–46
PART II REFUGEES UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW
9. Guy S. Goodwin-Gill (2008), ‘The Politics of Refugee Protection’, Refugee Survey Quarterly, 27 (1), 8–23
10. James C. Hathaway (1990), ‘A Reconsideration of the Underlying Premise of Refugee Law’, Harvard International Law Journal, 31 (1), Winter, 129–83
11. Alexander T. Aleinikoff (1992), ‘State-Centered Refugee Law: From Resettlement to Containment’, Michigan Journal of International Law, 14, Fall, 120–38
12. B.S. Chimni (1998), ‘The Geopolitics of Refugee Studies: A View from the South’, Journal of Refugee Studies, 11 (4), 350–74
13. C.J. Harvey (1999), ‘Talking about Refugee Law’, Journal of Refugee Studies, 12 (2), 101–34
14. Walter Kälin (2001), ‘Flight in Times of War’, International Review of the Red Cross, 83 (843), September, 629–50
15. Deborah E. Anker (2002), ‘Refugee Law, Gender and the Human Rights Paradigm’, Harvard Human Rights Journal, 15, 133–54
16. Alice Edwards (2005), ‘Human Rights, Refugees, and the Right “To Enjoy” Asylum’, International Journal of Refugee Law, 17 (2), 293–330
17. Hélène Lambert (2009), ‘Transnational Judicial Dialogue, Harmonization and the Common European Asylum System’, International and Comparative Law Quarterly, 58 (3), July, 519–43
18. Jane McAdam (2011), ‘Swimming Against the Tide: Why a Climate Change Displacement Treaty is Not the Answer’, International Journal of Refugee Law, 23 (1), March, 2–27
19. Vincent Chetail (2014), ‘Are Refugee Rights Human Rights? An Unorthodox Questioning of the Relations between Refugee Law and Human Rights Law’, in Ruth Rubio-Marín (ed.), Human Rights and Immigration, Chapter 1, Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 19–72
Index