Summary
Recording of the Panel Discussion and Book Launch on
“Conflict Refugees: Past, Present and Future of International Protection”
Video recording of the event:
https://uwe.cloud.panopto.eu/Panopto/Pages/Viewer.aspx?id=871f42e3-6e27-4747-8ef4-b1650097be0f
By the end of 2022, there were more than 35 million refugees in the world. The main cause of forced displacement today is violence and widespread human rights violations associated with armed conflict. Accordingly, most refugees originate from countries experiencing armed conflicts such as Syria, Ukraine, Afghanistan, South Sudan, and Myanmar. Many of these situations of armed conflict are described as ‘protracted’ reflecting the obstacles to peace building and leading to associated situations of protracted forced displacement as refugees cannot return home.
This Panel will discuss the application of the Refugee Convention to persons fleeing violence in conflict, including its prospects and challenges, and other complementary protection statuses, designed for the needs of persons displaced by indiscriminate violence in conflict. The Panel Discussion will also formally launch Christel Querton’s monograph Conflict Refugees: European Union Law and Practice, published by Cambridge University Press in 2023.
Agenda
Welcome and Introduction by Chair: Dr Ruvi Ziegler, Associate Professor in International Refugee Law, University of Reading
Presentation of Conflict Refugees by Author: Dr Christel Querton, Wallscourt Fellow in Law, University of the West of England. Slides from Christel’s presentation.
Book discussant: Dr Cathryn Costello, Full Professor of Global Refugee and Migration Law, Sutherland School of Law, University College Dublin
Panellists: Dr Iryna Hnasevych, Senior Legal Officer, European Council for Refugees and Exiles (ECRE)
Dr James C. Simeon, Associate Professor, York University, Toronto
Discussion/Q&As