The period after the Cold War has been marked by conflict despite what
was hoped to be a peaceful and collaborative world. Violence and persecution
continue to be committed in different corners of the world which
compels many people to flee their countries and seek protection in neighbouring
states as refugees, thereby rendering refugee protection an important
international issue. Many people mistakenly think that the refugee
problem is of particular concern only to the North, yet the South has as
much to do being a major source of refugee influx. In the face of global
crises of involuntary cross-border human displacement, the protection of
refugees has assumed and will continue to assume paramount significance.
Since its promulgation in 1951, the Convention relating to the Status
of Refugees dominates the understanding of refugee issues. However, due
mainly to the indifference and refusal of its members to keep true to their
commitments under the Convention, it is no longer as relevant and adaptive
as it once was. This book, An Introduction to International Refugee Law,
aims to underscore the urgent need for the members to deliver their commitments
and to set the stage for a deeper understanding of these assumed
obligations in a global setting. It purports to fulfill this goal by underscoring,
highlighting, elaborating, explaining and commenting on the salient
rules and principles of international law on refuges to afford a deeper
appreciation of its limitations and to pursue a reformist agenda.
We wish to extend our sincere thanks and gratitude to all contributors
who have come together to make this collection an exciting publication
on international refugee law. As editors, we have pursued a minimalist
interventionist approach in all chapters, which remain in substance the
original work of their respective author. We are also grateful to Lindy
Melman and Bea Timmer of Martinus Nijhoff Publishers for their support
and cooperation with this book.