Economies: rights and access to work (Forced Migration Review 58)
En podcast af Oxford University
36 Episoder
-  FMR 58 Humans and animals in refugee camps - A field study of migration and adversityUdgivet: 6.8.2018
-  FMR 58 Humans and animals in refugee camps - Animal and human health in the Sahrawi refugee campsUdgivet: 6.8.2018
-  FMR 58 - From the editorsUdgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - Refugees’ right to work and access to labour markets: constraints, challenges and ways forwardUdgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - Supporting recently resettled refugees in the UKUdgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - Integrating refugees into the Turkish labour marketUdgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - From refugee to employee: work integration in rural DenmarkUdgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - Integrating refugee doctors into host health-care systemsUdgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - Refugees’ engagement with host economies in UgandaUdgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - Refugees and host communities in the Rwandan labour marketUdgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - The role of rural grocery stores in refugee receptionUdgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - Collaboration with criminal organisations in Colombia: an obstacle to economic recoveryUdgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - Syrian economies: a temporary boom?Udgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - Obstacles to refugees’ self-reliance in GermanyUdgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - The new world of work and the need for digital empowermentUdgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - Investing in refugees: building human capitalUdgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - Towards greater visibility and recruitment of skilled refugeesUdgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - Validating highly educated refugees’ qualificationsUdgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - Refugee livelihoods: new actors, new modelsUdgivet: 10.7.2018
-  FMR 58 - The macro-economic impacts of Syrian refugee aidUdgivet: 10.7.2018
When people are forced to leave their homes, they usually also leave behind their means of economic activity. In their new location, they may not be able, or permitted, to work. This has wide-ranging implications. This issue includes 22 articles on the main feature theme of Economies: rights and access to work. It also includes two ‘mini-features’, one on Refugee-led social protection and one on Humans and animals in refugee camps. See more at: www.fmreview.org/economies.
 
 