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The Right of Repatriation – Canadian Refugee Policy: The Case of Rwanda

This paper examines the principle of the right to repatriation and the Canadian dilemma in applying that principle in dealing with both refugees and the country from which they originally fled, Rwanda. It is particularly concerned with the right of individuals to be a member of a state and with the right to regain membership … Continue reading The Right of Repatriation – Canadian Refugee Policy: The Case of Rwanda

Early Warning and Response: Why the International Community Failed to Prevent the Genocide

The enormity of the genocide in Rwanda demands that it be subjected to searching enquiry and that members of the international community, collectively and individually, examine their own roles in the event. This paper draws extensively on Study II of the Joint Evaluation, and examines the effectiveness of international monitoring (early warning) and management of … Continue reading Early Warning and Response: Why the International Community Failed to Prevent the Genocide

“Aid, Conflict, and Migration: the Canada-Sri Lanka Connection”

This paper aims to disentangle patterns of aid, trade, conflict and migration between Canada and Sri Lanka, illustrating the surprisingly significant traffic between the two countries and exploring the significance and quality of these connections. International aid to Sri Lanka is closely related to the opening of markets to multinational investment beginning in 1977. This … Continue reading “Aid, Conflict, and Migration: the Canada-Sri Lanka Connection”

“Towards a Feminist Geopolitics”

The intersections and conversations between feminist geography and political geography have been surprisingly few. The notion of a feminist geopolitics remains undeveloped in geography. This paper aims to create a theoretical and practical space in which to articulate a feminist geopolitics. Feminist geopolitics is not an alternative theory of geopolitics, nor the ushering in of … Continue reading “Towards a Feminist Geopolitics”

“Interrogating Borders: A Transnational Approach to Refugee Research in Vancouver”

Immigration is predicated on the centrality of the nation-state. The authors argue that analyzing settlement patterns and successful integration within a strictly national context is insufficient to understand the political, social, and economic relations which shape the lives of refugee immigrants in Canada. To support this claim, a less state-centric theoretical framework of transnational migration … Continue reading “Interrogating Borders: A Transnational Approach to Refugee Research in Vancouver”

“Bureaucracy and Compassion – Bureaucratizing The Good Samaritan: The Limitations of Humanitarian Relief Operations”

Dancing Across Borders: Exotic Dancers, Trafficking and Immigration Policy

This article analyzes a Canadian immigration program that authorizes issuance of temporary work visas to ‘exotic dancers.’ In response to public criticism that the government was thereby implicated in the transnational trafficking of women into sexual exploitation, Citizenship and Immigration Canada retained the visa program de jure but eliminated it de facto. Using a legal … Continue reading Dancing Across Borders: Exotic Dancers, Trafficking and Immigration Policy