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Distributed for University of British Columbia Press

Refugees Are (Not) Welcome Here

The Paradox of Protection in Canada

Analyzing the contradictions within Canada’s refugee system.

State-controlled refugee protection in Canada has gone through paradoxical developments in recent decades; while refugee rights have expanded, access to these rights has tightened. Previously unrecognized groups, such as women experiencing gender-based violence and 2SLGBTQ+ populations, are now considered legitimate refugees in refugee-law practices. Simultaneously, increasingly stringent administrative measures have made it harder for refugees to secure refugee status. 

Refugees Are (Not) Welcome Here draws on archival and media sources, interviews, and organizational data to examine how refugee claims are administered within a complex, contradictory regime that maintains its own legal and bureaucratic silos. Azar Masoumi explains why state-controlled refugee protection persists despite its many failures, not just in Canada but globally. This rigorous study deftly argues that the paradox inherent in refugee claim processing reflects a larger illogic: reliance on the exclusivist mechanisms of the nation-state to ensure the universality of rights. Ultimately, this book illuminates just how this paradox has turned refugee protection into an unfulfilled promise.

196 pages | 3 figures | 6 x 9 | © 2023

Law and Society

Law and Legal Studies: Law and Society

Political Science: Public Policy


Reviews

"The strength of this book is its use of archival and official material of the Canadian regime of refugee protection to show the inherent tensions of refugee protection in the work of state officials, and the difficulty of securing universal rights within a context of unwanted migration control. There is no other book like it."

Sule Tomkinson, Department of Political Science, Université Laval

"Focusing on the bureaucracy of refugee status determination, Refugees Are (Not) Welcome Here makes a significant and original contribution to critical refugee and migration studies. The volume will be of great benefit to Canadian audiences and beyond."

Adèle Garnier, co-editor of Refugee Resettlement: Power, Politics and Humanitarian Governance

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