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    <identifier>opus4.bicc:13517</identifier>
    <datestamp>2020-02-01</datestamp>
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                        <creator>
                            <creatorName>
                                Albert Kraler
                            </creatorName>
                        </creator>
                    
                        <creator>
                            <creatorName>
                                Margarita Fourer
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                        <creator>
                            <creatorName>
                                Are John Knudsen
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                        <creator>
                            <creatorName>
                                Juul Kwaks
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                        <creator>
                            <creatorName>
                                Katja Mielke
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                        <creator>
                            <creatorName>
                                Marion Noack
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                        <creator>
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                                Sarah Tobin
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                        <creator>
                            <creatorName>
                                Catherina Wilson
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                <titles>
                    <title>Learning from the Past. Protracted displacement in the post-World War II period (TRAFIG working paper 2).</title>
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                <publicationYear>2020</publicationYear>

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                    <description xml:lang="" descriptionType="Abstract">This working paper examines the history of the search for  solutions to protracted displacement. Focusing specifically on the Horn  of Africa, East Africa, the Middle East and South Asia, the paper  analyses past policy responses that explicitly or implicitly address  situations of extended exile. In addition, the paper examines the  potential of translocal mobility and connectivity as an individual- or  household-level solution to displacement. The concern to find solutions for long-term displacement situations  has been a key driver for the evolution of the international refugee  protection regime ever since its initiation in the interwar period. Yet,  only more recently have these efforts crystallised around the notions  of ‘durable solutions’ and ‘protracted displacement’. The emergence of  the latter concept in the 1990s reflects challenges arising from the  globalisation of the international refugee protection regime, the  massive growth of displacement in the Global South and the increasingly  limited availability of long-term solutions from the late 1970s onwards.  From a historical perspective, efforts to resolve specific protracted displacement situations have been diverse, devised in response to both  domestic and international constraints and opportunities. The current  shift away from the conventional durable solutions—return, integration  and resettlement—to less fixed solutions thus can be seen as a return to  historically dominant practices of a more context-driven search for  solutions. Research reviewed for this paper supports the TRAFIG project’s  hypothesis that mobility and connectivity practices can help displaced  persons cope with protracted displacement, and in some cases, find more  durable solutions for themselves. Yet, both mobility and connectivity  also have a stratifying effect, increasing the gap between those who  have access to these and those who do not. Historically, different forms  of assisted mobility for refugees to third countries have been  instrumental in resolving particular displacement situations, such as in  the interwar period, the post-World War II period and in Indo-China in  the 1970s and 1980s. In the current context, neither organised mobility  nor individual options for mobility are available to the same extent.   Keywords: History; protracted displacement; protracted refugee situations;  refugees; IDPs; governance; mobility; Europe; East Africa; Horn of  Africa; Middle East; South AsiaYou can download the Working Paper here.</description>
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