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Madeline Gleeson

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Madeline Gleeson

Madeline Gleeson is a lawyer and Senior Research Associate at the Andrew and Renata Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law. She has extensive experience working with forcibly displaced people around the world, including work on statelessness, refugees, human trafficking, labor migration and land grabbing with the Jesuit Refugee Service in Cambodia and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in Geneva. Madeline specializes in international human rights and refugee law, with a focus on the law of State responsibility, extraterritorial human rights obligations, offshore processing on Nauru and Manus Island, and the protection of children. She is the author of the award-winning book Offshore: Behind the Wire on Manus and Nauru (UNSW Press, 2016).

 

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Regional Cooperation on Refugee Protection: The Unanswered Questions
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  • التحليل
  • Regional Cooperation on Refugee Protection: The Unanswered Questions

    With record numbers of people displaced around the world, the issue of how regions might cooperate to manage forced migration, and respond to the needs of people on the move, has become more relevant than ever. In the Asia-Pacific, the need for some form of cooperation became particularly pressing during the Andaman Sea “crisis” of May 2015. However, despite a series of multilateral meetings in the wake of that period, it is not clear whether any meaningful progress towards this goal eventuated. As States in the region continue to grapple with the need for better coordination in their responses to displacement, this essay raises some of the lesser explored and as yet unanswered questions about whether and how regional cooperation on refugee protection might develop in this part of the world.

    September 6, 2017