FMR 13 : published June 2002

September 11: Has anything changed?

Contents

Special section

Introduction by the Migration Policy Institute Guest Editors

Afghanistan: conflict and displacement 1978 to 2001 by Hiram A Ruiz

Hope on the brink by Filippo Grandi

Civil military relations in Afghanistan compiled by Tim Morris

Foreign policy considerations in dealing with Afghanistan's refugees: when security and protection collide by Joanne van Selm

Receiving Afghanistan's asylum seekers: Australia, the Tampa 'Crisis' and refugee protection by William Maley

Afghan refugees in Europe by A-R Faquiri

Afghanistan and the challenges of humanitarian action in time of war by Roberta Cohen

Reinvigorating resettlement: changing realities demand changed approaches by John Fredriksson (with case study by Marta Bivak and Ceri Oeppen)

Exclusion, terrorism and the Refugee Convention by Monette Zard

Screening in mass influxes: the challenge of exclusion and separation by Bonaventure Rutinwa

What does it take to rebuild a state? by Paula R Newberg

Security and the ethics of asylum after 11 September by Matthew J Gibney

Further reflections

Palestinians in the aftermath of 11 September: wishing refugees out of existence? by Abbas Shiblak

Post 11 September jitters for Iraqi Kurds by Maggy Zanger

Endpiece

Lessening tensions in a tumultuous world: The Royal Institute for Inter-Faith Studies by HRH Prince El Hassan bin Talal