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International Law, Human Rights Cristiano d’Orsi International Law, Human Rights Cristiano d’Orsi

Several reflections on the displacement in the Sahel due to climate change

Environmental degradation has become a serious problem in the Sahel, which is disproportionately impacted by climate change, with temperatures rising 1.5 times faster than the global average, and the situation is further aggravated by political instability. It is, therefore, consequential that this entire situation has produced – and is producing – a massive displacement of populations within the region.

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International Law, Human Rights Abiy Ashenafi International Law, Human Rights Abiy Ashenafi

Reflections on some challenges to achieving durable solutions to violence-induced internal displacement in Ethiopia

In international refugee law, as well as IDP-specific soft law and practice, three forms of durable solutions, namely, local integration, return and relocation, have been recognised and implemented. These have been adopted in the African Union Convention on the Protection and Assistance to Internally Displaced Persons in Africa (Kampala Convention) – a regional binding treaty ratified by 33 African states, including Ethiopia. Yet, implementing the treaty and realising durable solutions for IDPs has been difficult. This piece identifies several challenges to achieving durable solutions to violence-induced displacement in Ethiopia and offers some recommendations.

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International Law, Human Rights Alicia Raymond International Law, Human Rights Alicia Raymond

South Africa, the Rainbow Nation that only loves certain colours of the Rainbow?

The post-apartheid era has seen the golden age of transformative laws and policies, providing rights and legal entitlements for the previously disadvantaged within South Africa. However, in as much as South Africa has celebrated over 28 years of democracy, that democracy can rightly be argued to exclude non-South Africans. Do we intend to equally provide basic rights to all persons within our borders or is South Africa a rainbow nation that only loves certain colours of the rainbow?

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International Law Aimée-Noël Mbiyozo International Law Aimée-Noël Mbiyozo

Climate Change and Migration: A Complex Web

Climate change is described as the ‘ultimate threat multiplier’. Changes to the natural environment put pressure on social, economic and political systems. As a threat multiplier, climate change exposes and exploits existing vulnerabilities. It worsens pre-existing tensions, weak governance and other socio-economic factors.

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Human Rights, Constitutional Law Callixte Kavuro Human Rights, Constitutional Law Callixte Kavuro

Gender Inequality: The Vulnerabilities of Women under the Asylum System

South Africa’s 1998 Refugees Act fails to reflect the country’s constitutional commitment to equality in as far as it entrenches the unequal treatment of women. Shortcomings in refugee protection lead to the treatment of refugee women as minors and smother their autonomous voice in the refugee application process.

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Human Rights, International Law Mispa Roux Human Rights, International Law Mispa Roux

Refugees of the Ukraine Conflict Expose European and Western States’ Deep-Seated Bias Towards “the Other”

The Ukrainian refugee crisis has exposed multifaceted layers of discrimination, racism, and prejudice towards “the other” by European and Western states.   Despite the condemnation of differential treatment and racism against non-Ukrainian refugees and the implementation of protective measures for all refugees, differential treatment and double standards continue to manifest in practice.

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