Finding agency in adversity: The future of the refugee law in the context of disasters and climate change

Similar documents
Matthew Scott JUFN 20 Migration Law 6 February Climate change, disasters and international protection

Matthew Scott JAMR13 Migration Law 6 February Climate change, disasters and international protection

Refugee Status Determination in the Context of Natural Disasters and Climate Change: A Human Rights-Based Approach

A M Clayton (Member) Date of Hearing: 21 August & 1 September Date of Decision: 22 September 2017 REFUGEE AND PROTECTION DECISION

UNITAR SEMINAR ON ENVIRONMENTALLY INDUCED MIGRATION AND CLIMATE CHANGE 20 April 2010 PRESENTATION IN SESSION II WHAT ARE IMPLICATIONS FOR DEVELOPMENT?

CURRENT THINKING IN REFUGEE LAW: PERSECUTION AND CONVENTION REASONS. LECTURE SERIES 2 (Mark Symes and Hugo Storey)

INPUT TO THE UN SECRETARY-GENERAL S REPORT ON THE GLOBAL COMPACT FOR SAFE, ORDERLY AND REGULAR MIGRATION

REFUGEE FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Applicant. THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE OF MINISTRY OF BUSINESS, INNOVATION AND EMPLOYMENT Respondent JUDGMENT OF THE COURT

CLIMATE CHANGE AND POPULATION MOVEMENTS Outline of lecture by Dr. Walter Kälin

Climate Change and Human Rights. International Climate Change and Energy Law Spring semester 2014 Dr. Christina Voigt

AGENDA FOR THE PROTECTION OF CROSS-BORDER DISPLACED PERSONS IN THE CONTEXT OF DISASTERS AND CLIMATE CHANGE

Human Mobility in the Context of Disasters and Climate Change Pacific Regional Capacity Building Workshop

TASK FORCE ON DISPLACEMENT

10 October Background Paper submitted by the Representative of the Secretary General on the Human Rights of Internally Displaced Persons

POLICY BRIEF THE CHALLENGE DISASTER DISPLACEMENT AND DISASTER RISK REDUCTION ONE PERSON IS DISPLACED BY DISASTER EVERY SECOND

IUCN AEL Colloquium Oslo. Please contact: Tori Kirkebø

Natural Disasters and Refugee Protection

International Migration, Environment and Sustainable Development

Highlights and Overview

Chapter 5. Development and displacement: hidden losers from a forgotten agenda

chapter 1 people and crisis

DRAFT DRAFT DRAFT. Background

Climate of Displacement, Climate for Protection?

New Zealand s approach to Refugees: Legal obligations and current practices

COMMISSION IMPLEMENTING DECISION. of

Discussion Paper. Human rights, migration, and displacement related to the adverse impacts of climate change

KEY HLP PRINCIPLES FOR SHELTER PARTNERS March 2014

THE ROMA CASE IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS

Presentation to side event at the Civicus forum OCHA 6 November 2017

WHEREAS, President Donald F. Trump addressed a crowd of Haitian Americans in Miami s

Economic, Social and Cultural rights and the Refugee Convention

The Physical Therapists Role in Humanitarian Crises

Protection of persons affected by the effects of climate change, including the displaced Observations and Recommendations

Protection of Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs)

A HUMAN RIGHTS-BASED GLOBAL COMPACT FOR SAFE, ORDERLY AND REGULAR MIGRATION

The Ability of the Poor to Cope

Famine: The end point of a global protection crisis

Climate Change and Human Rights. International Climate Change and Energy Law Spring semester 2012 Dr. Christina Voigt

Rethinking Protection of those Displaced by Humanitarian Crises Susan F. Martin Donald G. Herzberg Professor of International Migration

Refugees and HIV. Rajeev Bais MD, MPH The Carolina Survivor Clinic Division of Infectious Diseases The University of South Carolina School of Medicine

FEDERAL COURT NELL TOUSSAINT. and THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA APPLICANT S WRITTEN REPRESENTATIONS IN SUPPORT OF MOTION

WOMEN AND GIRLS IN EMERGENCIES

Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women

Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women

2011 HIGH LEVEL MEETING ON YOUTH General Assembly United Nations New York July 2011

INSTRUCTOR VERSION. Persecution and displacement: Sheltering LGBTI refugees (Nairobi, Kenya)

REFUGEE LAW IN INDIA

BRIEF OF THE CANADIAN ASSOCIATION OF REFUGEE LAWYERS

General Assembly Junior. Agenda

Challenges to the Protection of Refugees and Stateless Persons Compliance with International Law

Until there s a home for everyone

Migration Amendment (Complementary Protection) Bill 2009

Health 2020: Multisectoral action for the health of migrants

IFRC Policy Brief: Global Compact on Refugees

Who is eligible for housing? By Amy Lush, 12 College Place

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 8 December [without reference to a Main Committee (A/71/L.33 and Add.1)]

Committee on Women s Rights and Gender Equality. on women, gender equality and climate justice (2017/2086(INI))

Percentage of people killed by natural disaster category: 2004 and Natural disasters by number of deaths

Migration Consequences of Complex Crises: IOM Institutional and Operational Responses 1

Environment, climate change and migration nexus. Global meeting of RCPs October 2011 Gaborone, Bostawana

Recognizing that priorities for responding to protracted refugee situations are different from those for responding to emergency situations,

(23 February 2013, Palais des Nations, Salle XII) Remarks of Mr. José Riera Senior Adviser Division of International Protection, UNHCR Headquarters

Submission by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. For the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights Compilation Report

People on the Move: The "push factors" of environmental degradation, climate change and humanitarian emergencies EMERGENCY TOOLS AND FRAMEWORKS

ADMINISTRATIVE DETETENTION OF ASYLUM SEEKERS AND IRREGULAR MIGRANTS IN EUROPE

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 18 December [on the report of the Third Committee (A/69/482)]

Ad d r essi n g H u m an M i gr at i on i n a Su stai n abl e M an n er

SUPPORTING REFUGEE CHILDREN DURING PRE-MIGRATION, IN TRANSIT AND POST-MIGRATION

Asylum Aid s Submission to the Home Office/UK Border Agency Consultation: Immigration Appeals

Resolution 1 Together for humanity

Climate change and displacement: Protecting whom, protecting how?

Written statement * submitted by Amnesty International, a non-governmental organization in special consultative status

Note on the Cancellation of Refugee Status

Chapter 2: Persons of Concern to UNHCR

(5 October 2017, Geneva)

C M Treadwell (Member) Date of Decision: 31 August 2016 DECISION

THE AIRE CENTRE Advice on Individual Rights in Europe

INTRODUCTION TO THE GUIDING PRINCIPLES ON INTERNAL DISPLACEMENT. By Roberta Cohen Co-Director, Brookings-CUNY Project on Internal Displacement

Economic, Social and Cultural rights and the Refugee Convention

SAFE FROM FEAR SAFE. Council of Europe Convention on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic violence CETS No.

15-1. Provisional Record

RIGHTS ON THE MOVE Refugees, asylum-seekers, migrants and the internally displaced AI Index No: POL 33/001/2004

HLP GUIDANCE NOTE ON RELOCATION FOR SHELTER PARTNERS March Beyond shelter, the social and economic challenges of relocation

Transfer of the Civilian Population in International Law

Bill C-24 - Citizenship bill Submission of the Canadian Council for Refugees. 26 March 2014

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 23 December [without reference to a Main Committee (A/69/L.49 and Add.1)]

We hope this paper will be a useful contribution to the Committee s inquiry into the extent of income inequality in Australia.

Slow onset effects of climate change and human rights protection for cross-border migrants

Who are migrants? Impact

Official Journal of the European Union

(OJ L 163, , p. 1)

An interactive exhibition designed to expose the realities of the global refugee crisis

Statement by Carolyn Hannan, Director, United Nations Division for the Advancement of Women

TAKING THE RIGHTS STEPS Children s Rights: Wales and the World. Separated Children Seeking Sanctuary in Wales Swansea University, 11/12 th June 2012

Defining What You Know

FORCED FROM HOME. Doctors Without Borders Presents AN INTERACTIVE EXHIBITION ABOUT THE REALITIES OF THE GLOBAL REFUGEE CRISIS

Draft declaration on the right to international solidarity a

ITUC and ETUC Statement addressed to European and African Governments on the occasion of the Valletta Conference on Migration November

Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women

Transcription:

Matthew Scott matthew.scott@jur.lu.se @matthewscott111 Finding agency in adversity: The future of the refugee law in the context of disasters and climate change 1 st Annual Conference The Refugee Law Initiative The Future of Refugee Law? 29 June 1 July 2016 London, United Kingdom

Why should refugee lawyers think about disasters and climate change at all? More people exposed and vulnerable to disasters Cross-border disaster-related displacement is a reality Patchwork of discretionary policies and ad hoc responses i.e. no comprehensive system in EU means protection not guaranteed People are seeking (and being denied) international protection under CSR and complementary protection instruments Therefore The principle of anxious scrutiny requires refugee lawyers to leave no stone unturned in determining how such instruments apply

Framing

How shouldn t we conceptualize disasters? As the indiscriminate force of nature As the adverse impacts of climate change As precisely the phenomenon that CSR 51 was not designed for

A and Another v MIEA & Anor [1997] HCA By including in its operative provisions the requirement that a refugee fear persecution, the Convention limits its humanitarian scope and does not afford universal protection to asylum seekers. No matter how devastating may be the epidemic, natural disaster or famine, a person fleeing them is not a refugee within the terms of the Convention. (Dawson J) Cited with approval by Lord Hope in Horvath [2000] UKHL 37, who emphasized the notion of surrogate protection

Canada (Attorney General) v. Ward, [1993] 2 S.C.R. 689 The need for "persecution" in order to warrant international protection, for example, results in the exclusion of such pleas as those of economic migrants, i.e., individuals in search of better living conditions, and those of victims of natural disasters, even when the home state is unable to provide assistance, although both of these cases might seem deserving of international sanctuary (La Forest J)

K & Fornah v SSHD [2006] UKHL 46 Very bad things happen to a great many people but the international community has not committed itself to giving them all a safe haven. People fleeing national and international wars, famine or other natural disasters are referred to as refugees, and offered humanitarian aid by the international community, but they do not generally fall within the definition in the 1951 Convention. Asylum can only be claimed by people who have a well- founded fear of persecution for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion. (Baroness Hale) [97]

Therefore In disasters There appears to be no agent of persecution States tend to do their best to help victims The impact is indiscriminate and cannot thus be related to a Convention reason Disasters engender adversity and invite a humanitarian response The Refugee Convention is an inappropriate instrument for addressing the protection needs of people displaced in the context of disasters and climate change

Thank you!

These judicial opinions reflect the continued operation of the hazard paradigm The hazard paradigm: Disasters are equivalent to the natural hazards that can trigger them [absent consideration of historical, social, political economic and other underlying factors] States tend to do their best to help all people within their jurisdiction there is no breakdown in the social contract Disasters are indiscriminate That s not to say that hazard events don t often kill, injure, destroy property and displace indiscriminately - but such impacts always occur in a social context that warrants express articulation

How should refugee lawyers conceptualize disasters? Disasters as revealing and exacerbating discriminatory failures of state protection that result in a serious violation/denial of human rights

Disaster risk = hazard x vulnerability

Wisner et al, At Risk, 2004

The social paradigm Disasters are not purely naturally occurring phenomena, but rather are deeply social phenomena States do not always do their best to address the needs of all persons within their jurisdiction in the context of a disaster (and in the periods leading up to and in the aftermath of such events and processes) Disaster impacts are differential, at times owing to a person s race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion

Discrimination and disasters Thus, depending on the society and situation, social characteristics such as gender, age, physical and mental health status, occupation, marital status, sexuality, race, ethnicity, religion and immigration status may have a bearing on potential loss, injury or death in the face of hazards or resource made to be hazards and the prospects and processes for changing that situation - Wisner, Kelman and Gaillard - Framing Disaster: Theories and Stories Seeking to Understand Hazards, Vulnerability and Risk As in normal times, differentiating factors such as race, ethnicity, class, age, and gender are key variables in the emergence of patterns of consensus and conflict The factors of race, ethnicity, class, gender, and age are also significant in differentiating impact Preexisting morally and religiously sanctioned patterns of social inequality, for example, are held responsible for further discrimination and deprivation in circumstances of famine in India - Anthony Oliver-Smith, Anthropological Research on Hazards and Disasters Discrimination was and is inherent in many societies, with disasters often magnifying the problem Every emergency involves people who cannot access food and shelter simply because of their age, ethnicity, gender or disability. People already on the margins of society as a result of discrimination are made even more vulnerable through a crisis - IFRC, World Disasters Report 2007: Focus on Discrimination

How does this paradigm affect the way claims for international protection fall to be considered?

Case law demonstrating appreciation of the social paradigm

Inspiration from emerging NZIPT case law BG (Fiji); AF (Kiribati) [focus on CSR]; and AC (Tuvalu) [focus on ICCPR] considered: No recognition of international legal obligation in any case, but principles articulated Being persecuted human rights based approach Nexus predicament approach Risk real chance possibility of anticipatory flight?

Being persecuted in a disaster context Persecution = serious harm + absence of state protection Serious harm Economic and social rights in focus [BG (Fiji)] Death, injury, disease, hunger, homelessness, displacement (or cast as rights to life, health, adequate standard of living) Absence of state protection Ex ante failures of disaster risk reduction including discriminatory conditions that increase vulnerability and exposure - Relative to the facts of the case, ability of state to take measures? [AC (Tuvalu), ref Budayeva] Ex post facto failures of disaster response including discriminatory distribution of relief; failures to ensure physical security; failures to ensure minimum core of economic and social rights [AF (Kiribati)] Proximity between conduct and harm?

Nexus in a disaster context Targeted: Discriminatory distribution of disaster relief (consider obiter comments in Khawar; RT (Zimbabwe); Ahmadis in Pakistan floods 2010 Bifurcated: States electing not to invest in disaster risk reduction in certain areas out of a lack of concern for inhabitants, owing to their race, religion, nationality, MPSG or political opinion (Hurricane Katrina?) Predicament approach: Distinct from singling out by actor of persecution Individuals are vulnerable and exposed to disasters because of their race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion inviting an intersectional analysis perhaps combination of protected characteristics particularly relevant in relation to cumulative persecution Reewin and Bantu in Somali famine? (perhaps take up in discussion?)

Risk on return the real conceptual challenge Beyond remote or speculative, below balance of probabilities [AF (Kiribati); AC (Tuvalu)] Past failures of DRR create strong presumption of future risk [AC (Tuvalu)] Sudden onset Intense risk of serious harm during and in the immediate aftermath In general, conditions cease to entail a real risk of serious harm for majority after intervention of humanitarian assistance although much more information is needed about specific risks to specific groups in specific contexts (case law is the best way to generate this) consider smaller disasters Slower onset More complex resolution owing to complex social causes (as distinct from sudden impact of natural hazard event) Can improve with rains/next harvest Often interconnected with conflict Questions Is there a date stamp on risk on return? Risk of recurrence?

Therefore, refugee lawyers should conceptualize disasters as: Part of the rich fabric of individual claims for international protection having regard to the (discriminatory) social context in which disasters unfold, the various forms of disaster related harm and states positive obligations in relation to disaster risk reduction and response, and mindful of the dominant interpretation of the eligibility requirements for international protection in the jurisdiction

The future? Targeted COI drawing i.e. on Integrated Phase Classification on food insecurity; World Risk Index; ethnography; OCHA situation reports More cases generate better understanding of the individual impact of climate change and disasters The application of international refugee law in this context is clarified over time on a case by case basis Most people continue to be ineligible for refugee status, confirming the ongoing need for alternative approaches as articulated in the Nansen Initiative s Protection Agenda