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With over 17,000,000 refugees inhabiting the globe today, this book addresses this dramatic 20th-century phenomenon and several of the issues it raises. Gorman examines how refugee situations arise and the way in which they are addressed by the various global actors: governments, UN agencies, and private voluntary organisations. He argues that the entire refugee situation - the provisions of aid, the search for durable solutions, and the resolution of conflicts - involves complex interactions between political and humanitarian causes. Drawing upon his own personal experience in the refugee assistance field, the author explores the various actors, their interactions, refugee emergencies, refugee protection, issues surrounding refugee repatriation, local settlement, and Third country resettlement. Gorman pays special attention to refugee policies of the US government, which have dominated the refugee assistance network since World War II. The book, however, is more than a systematic analysis of contemporary refugee affairs; by referring to literature, history, and political philosophy, it aims to illustrate how the problem of exile has been a timeless element of the human condition. Combining scholarship, international policy analysis, and human interest stories, it offers a comprehensive treatment of the policies of refugee affairs and humanitarian assistance to war-torn regions of the world.
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With over 17,000,000 refugees inhabiting the globe today, this book addresses this dramatic 20th-century phenomenon and several of the issues it raises. Gorman examines how refugee situations arise and the way in which they are addressed by the various global actors: governments, UN agencies, and private voluntary organisations. He argues that the entire refugee situation - the provisions of aid, the search for durable solutions, and the resolution of conflicts - involves complex interactions between political and humanitarian causes. Drawing upon his own personal experience in the refugee assistance field, the author explores the various actors, their interactions, refugee emergencies, refugee protection, issues surrounding refugee repatriation, local settlement, and Third country resettlement. Gorman pays special attention to refugee policies of the US government, which have dominated the refugee assistance network since World War II. The book, however, is more than a systematic analysis of contemporary refugee affairs; by referring to literature, history, and political philosophy, it aims to illustrate how the problem of exile has been a timeless element of the human condition. Combining scholarship, international policy analysis, and human interest stories, it offers a comprehensive treatment of the policies of refugee affairs and humanitarian assistance to war-torn regions of the world.