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Book review: The Oxford Handbook of International Refugee Law, edited by Costello, Foster and McAdam

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The Oxford Handbook of International Refugee Law, edited by Cathryn Costello, Michelle Foster and Jane McAdam and published in June 2021, is a massive book in every sense. Some five years in the making, running to 1,258 pages, consisting of 65 chapters, all by different authors (and sometimes multiple authors), the book is physically imposing. The breadth and depth of material is also colossal and the range of contributors genuinely broad. All three editors and a majority of contributors are women, which, as was said at the launch event, reflects a feminisation of the field of study in recent years. The editors have clearly worked hard to make the book a global one but, also reflective of the field, scholars from the Global North are predominant.

The handbook operates as a guide to the latest thinking and academic work on each topic that is addressed. Each chapter is a self-contained essay on the designated subject. The ones I have read so far have been short, accessible and strike a good balance between providing an overview of the subject and signposting further reading through footnotes. Use of academic jargon is, helpfully, very restrained. I have been quite surprised to find myself reading through them as quickly as I have, frankly, having initially been a bit overwhelmed when the book first arrived.

Basically, if you are interested in widening and deepening your knowledge and understanding of the global system of refugee law and protection, this handbook is an invaluable entry point.

What’s in it?

The book is divided into several parts. So far I have read through a dozen or so individual chapters but I thought it would be helpful to provide an idea of the overall contents. You can see the full chapter and contributor list on the publisher website if interested (the “table of contents” tab on the left).

Part I is addressed to the scholarly field of international refugee law and includes material on the pre-war history and evolution of refugee law; the issue of race and refugee law; feminism and refugee law; sexuality and refugee law; the politics and ethics of refugee protection; the refugee/migrant binary; and the intersection of refugee law and statelessness law.

Part II on sources of international refugee law considers the architecture of the Refugee Convention; the role and function of UNHCR; the interaction between the bodies of international refugee, humanitarian and human rights law; the extent to which a body of customary international human rights law has developed; and the role of some national constitutions in refugee protection. This last issue recurs in a couple of later chapters in Part VI as well.

Part III on regional regimes looks at the way refugee law and protection operates in Africa, North America, Latin America, the Middle East, Europe, Central Asia, East Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia and Oceania.

Part IV on access to protection and responsibility-sharing addresses the sharing of responsibility for protecting refugees; interdiction at sea; externalisation and deterrence; international safe third country law and practice; smuggling and human trafficking of migrants and refugees; refugee status determination; asylum procedure; and credibility and evidence.

Part V on the scope of refugee protection compares the international and regional refugee definitions; Palestinian refugees, UNRWA and Article 1D of the Refugee Convention; complementary protection; temporary protection; the “internal protection” alternative; exclusion; women in refugee jurisprudence; refugee children; sexual orientation and gender; refugees with disabilities; stateless refugees; conflict refugees; displacement and climate change; and internal displacement.

It is this section which offers the most directly helpful material to legal practitioners.

Part VI on refugee rights and realities covers the right to asylum; national constitutions and the right to asylum; non-refoulement; non-penalisation and non-criminalisation; the right to liberty; the right to work; the right to education; the right to family reunification; and the digital transformation of refugee governance.

Part VII on cessation and durable solutions includes chapters on cessation; refugee naturalisation and integration; voluntary repatriation; resettlement; and onward migration.

Part VIII on accountability for displacement and refugee rights violations includes chapters on restitution and other remedies for refugees and internally displaced persons; the responsibility of armed groups; the accountability of international organisations; and, finally, border crimes as crimes against humanity.

Is it good?

The handbook stands as a state of the art review of international refugee law and scholarship by some of the most prominent and well respected writers and thinkers in the field.

Trying to find something to say beyond gushing praise, it does feel from a legal practitioner’s perspective like there may be some omissions in the book’s coverage. There are no chapters directly addressing stalwart issues like being persecuted, Convention reasons and state protection; such coverage could have examined critically how case law has evolved or might evolve in future. While the law on these topics does seem stable right now, that does not mean there is not more to say about them. Some re-evaluation of core concepts is arguably overdue.

There is, inevitably in a volume by so many contributors, some overlap between chapters, although not much quite frankly. Some of the contributors do not seem quite aligned with their topics. Rebecca Hamlin writes (excellently) on the politics of international refugee law and protection, rather than on the subject two chapters over: refugees as migrants, on which Hamlin has literally just published a really interesting and thought-provoking book (Crossing: How we label and react to people on the move). Again, this is inevitable when there are so many eminent scholars covering so many topics.

This is not a text aimed squarely at a refugee law practitioner to assist directly with their practice, so much as an overall introduction to the subject area. There is no better way to gain a rapid, broad yet also deep understanding of contemporary international refugee law.

I leave you with the video from the book launch:

Interested in refugee law? You might like Colin's book, imaginatively called "Refugee Law" and published by Bristol University Press.

Communicating important legal concepts in an approachable way, this is an essential guide for students, lawyers and non-specialists alike.

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Colin Yeo

Colin Yeo

Immigration and asylum barrister, blogger, writer and consultant at Garden Court Chambers in London and founder of the Free Movement immigration law website.

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