Institute of Race Relations Vol. 47(1): 64–91
Abstract:
Issues of immigration, asylum and refugee rights have become targets for politicians of all persuasions across Europe, from social democrats to the far Right. Ever-increasing pressure, spearheaded by populist media and electioneering politicians, to reduce the numbers of those seeking asylum, to raise the bar for successful claims and retu those whose claims have ‘failed’ has
resulted in sustained abuse of human rights. Europe’s deportation programme serves to undermine not only the Geneva Convention, but also inteational conventions on human rights and children’s rights. Yet, despite the shocking nature of the practices exposed here, little heed is paid to them or to the traumas suffered by their victims – a blindness that is only explicable in terms of the xenoracism meted out to the desperate and the dispossessed.
Abstract:
Issues of immigration, asylum and refugee rights have become targets for politicians of all persuasions across Europe, from social democrats to the far Right. Ever-increasing pressure, spearheaded by populist media and electioneering politicians, to reduce the numbers of those seeking asylum, to raise the bar for successful claims and retu those whose claims have ‘failed’ has
resulted in sustained abuse of human rights. Europe’s deportation programme serves to undermine not only the Geneva Convention, but also inteational conventions on human rights and children’s rights. Yet, despite the shocking nature of the practices exposed here, little heed is paid to them or to the traumas suffered by their victims – a blindness that is only explicable in terms of the xenoracism meted out to the desperate and the dispossessed.