REPORTS

 
 

 

No Place Home

- Iraqi Refugees between Precarious Safety and Precipitous Return

By Layla Al-Zubaidi and Heiko Wimmen

Large numbers of Iraqi refugees have been arriving in neighboring countries, especially Syria and Jordan, in particular since the conflict in Iraq evolved into large-scale ethno-sectarian violence and displacement. For a long time, this new and increasingly massive refugee crisis in the Middle East has been virtually ignored by Western media and public opinion. With the apparent improvement of security in Iraq comes the danger that the slowly growing awareness of the dimensions of the crisis – which is yet to be followed by substantial action to address the plight of this people – may give way to expectations that the problem may just go away as people return, or that those who stay put in exile do so for ulterior motives, in particular eventual immigration to the “prosperity” of the West. The following report attempts to give an overview of the origin and magnitude of the crisis, probes the likelihood of substantial numbers of refugees returning in the near future, and assesses the responsibility of international actors towards the refugees. Read...

 
 

 

Layla Al-Zubaidi is the director of the Heinrich Böll Foundation’s Middle East Office in Beirut, and Heiko Wimmen is a project manager for the Foundation.

 
 
 

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OTHER VOICES

Steven SeidmanStreets of Beirut: Self and the Encounter with ‘the Other’

More readings available from the hbf translation project

Other Voices

DOSSIERS

Obvious and Hidden:
Marginalized Sexual Identities in the Arab World

 

Iraqi Refugee Crisis

 

Climate Change and the Middle East

 

War in Darfur

PUBLICATIONS

Damascus: Tourists, Artists, Secret Agents

 

Bareed Mista3jil

 

New Finance for Climate Change and the Environment

 

Waiting for the Barbarians
A Tribute to Edward Said

 

Green Wars?
Conference Report

 

Cities of the South: Citizenship and Exclusion in the 21st Century