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Kelsey P. Norman

الخبرة

Egypt, Lebanon, Turkey

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Kelsey P. Norman

Kelsey Norman is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Political Science at the University of California, Irvine. Her research focuses on Middle East and North African states as countries of migrant and refugee settlement and her dissertation is titled “Degrees of Ambivalence: Variation in New Host State Migrant Engagement Strategies in Egypt, Morocco and Turkey.” Her studies are supported by a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) of Canada doctoral fellowship, and also by project grants from the Project on Middle East Political Science (POMEPS), the Kugelman Center for Citizen Peacebuilding, the Center for Peace and Conflict Studies (CGPACS), and the Center for Research on Immigration, Population & Public Policy. Her publications include: “Migrants, Refugees and the Egyptian Security State,” International Journal of Migration and Border Studies 2, 4 (2016): 345-364; “Host State Responsibility and Capacity in Egypt, Morocco and Turkey,” in ‘The Long Term Challenges of Forced Migration,’ LSE Middle East Centre Collected Papers 6 [available on-line]; and with Rawan Arar and Lisel Hintz, “The Real Refugee Crisis is in the Middle East, Not Europe.” The Monkey Cage Blog for The Washington Post, May 14, 2016 [available on-line]; “Refugees in Turkey: Implications of Increasing Politicization,” Jadaliyya, June 6, 2015 [available on-line]; and “Co-Ethnicity, Security and Host Government Engagement: Egypt as a Non-Traditional Receiver of Migrants and Refugees.” Refugee Review 2 (2015): 77-95 [available on-line].

Website: http://www.kelseypnorman.com/

The Latest from Kelsey P. Norman

تصفية حسب
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Access to Legal Residency for Refugees in the Middle East: Bureaucracy, Deterrence, and Prolonged Impermanence
معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • التحليل
  • Access to Legal Residency for Refugees in the Middle East: Bureaucracy, Deterrence, and Prolonged Impermanence

    The more than four million refugees presently residing in Middle East and North Africa host states often have difficulty accessing residency due to several factors, including bureaucratic barriers, prohibitive application costs, and policies designed to intentionally exclude them from the national residence system. This essay explores how states such as Egypt only issue permits for very limited periods of time, states such as Turkey make residency contingent upon remaining in one isolated geographic region, and states such as Lebanon make the process so expensive and burdensome that refugees are effectively forced to remain in an irregular status. While sometimes these barriers only have mild implications because residency permits are not frequently checked by host state authorities, in many cases the consequences can be dire.

    December 7, 2016

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