TY - BOOK AU - Orchard,Phil TI - A Right to flee: refugees, states, and the construction of international cooperation SN - 9781139923293 (ebook) AV - HV640 .O74 2014 U1 - 325/.21 23 PY - 2014/// CY - Cambridge PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Internally displaced persons KW - Protection KW - International cooperation KW - Refugees N1 - Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015); Introduction : a right to flee -- Structures, agency, and refugee protection -- Refugees and the emergence of international society -- The nineteenth century : a laissez-faire regime -- The interwar refugee regime and the failure of international cooperation -- American leadership and the emergence of the post-war regime -- The norm entrepreneurship of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees -- The non-entrée regime -- Refugees and state cooperation in international society N2 - Why do states protect refugees? In the past twenty years, states have sought to limit access to asylum by increasing their border controls and introducing extraterritorial controls. Yet no state has sought to exit the 1951 Refugee Convention or the broader international refugee regime. This book argues that such international policy shifts represent an ongoing process whereby refugee protection is shaped and redefined by states and other actors. Since the seventeenth century, a mix of collective interests and basic normative understandings held by states created a space for refugees to be separate from other migrants. However, ongoing crisis events undermine these understandings and provide opportunities to reshape how refugees are understood, how they should be protected, and whether protection is a state or multilateral responsibility. Drawing on extensive archival and secondary materials, Phil Orchard examines the interplay among governments, individuals, and international organizations that has shaped how refugees are understood today UR - https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139923293 ER -