Refugee Reception in Southern Africa
National and Local Policies in Zambia and South Africa
Abstract
A new understanding of state-based refugee reception that reflects the complex dynamics of contemporary refugee arrival. It is no longer realistic (if it ever was) to understand persons who flee across a border as a homogeneous group whose movement abruptly ends once they arrive in a host state or refugee camp. Through a comparative analysis of the politics surrounding the welcome afforded to refugees, this book offers an original perspective on refugee hosting in Southern Africa. Using the cases of Zambia and South Africa, the book explores why some countries maintain encampment reception policies for refugees, and others use more liberal ‘free settlement’ approaches, whereby refugees are granted freedom of movement and permitted to settle in cities and towns. While state-based reception is frequently framed as one-off moments, such as registration, Refugee Reception in Southern Africa examines reception as a complex and ongoing process of negotiations between refugees and state, with reception policies vital in shaping a refugee’s ability to settle and engage with local communities and labour markets. With its new ‘refugee reception’ framework and in-depth case studies full of concrete examples, this book is a significant theoretical and methodological contribution to migration studies more broadly.
Keywords
protection; Africa; mobility; refugee camps; urban displacement; encampment; host state; settlement; liberal; freedom of movementDOI
10.14296/wmpx9915ISBN
9781908590749, 9781908590756, 9781908590770, 9781912250622, 9781908590763Publisher
University of London PressPublisher website
https://uolpress.co.uk/Publication date and place
London, 2024Series
Critical Human Rights Studies,Classification
Refugees and political asylum
Migration, immigration and emigration
Human rights, civil rights