The State of the World's Refugees, 2000: Fifty Years of Humanitarian ActionOxford University Press, 2000 - 340 páginas "Looking at the challenges of the 1990s, the book examines the population shifts in the former Soviet region, the Kurdish exodus from northern Iraq following the Gulf war, the increasingly restrictive asylum policies in Europe and North America, and the recent crises in the Balkans, the Great Lakes region of Africa, East Timor, and the Caucasus." "In this timely and important publication, UNHCR emphasizes the need to find lasting solutions to problems of forced displacement. Without human security, it argues, there can be no peace and stability."--BOOK JACKET. |
Conteúdo
McDonald | 15 |
The Algerian war of independence | 37 |
Decolonization south of the Sahara | 44 |
Page | 62 |
2380 | 106 |
33 | 112 |
37 | 133 |
45 | 152 |
1 | 157 |
1 | 288 |
353 | 310 |
3 | 315 |
3 | 316 |
330 | |
Termos e frases comuns
1951 UN Refugee Afghan Africa areas armed arrivals Asia Asylum applications asylum seekers Bangladesh became border Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnian Serb Burundi Cambodia civilian conflict Congo East Timor emergency established Ethiopia ethnic Europe exodus F/HCR fled fleeing forces former Yugoslavia funding Geneva groups Haitians High Commissioner High Commissioner Ogata host human rights humanitarian organizations immigration increasingly India Indochinese internally displaced persons international community involved Iran Iraq Kivu Kosovo Laos large numbers major migration military million Mozambique NGOs North Ossetia number of refugees Pakistan persecution political problems programme refugee camps Refugee Convention refugee crisis refugee population refugee protection refugee status refugees and displaced regime region reintegration relief operation repatriation operation Report Republic resettlement response result Rohingyas role Rwanda Rwandan refugees Salvadoran Secretary-General situation Somalia South Soviet Union Sudan Tanzania territory Thailand thousands Tutsi UNHCR United Nations UNPROFOR Viet Vietnamese violence Western Zaire Zairean