Africa in the Globalizing World – A Research Agenda
Ulf Engel (SFB 1199 & Leipzig U), Matthias Middell (SFB 1199 & Leipzig U), David Simo (U Yaoundé) & Katja Werthmann (SFB 1199 & Leipzig U)
Publication Date
September 2017
Publisher
Leipzig: Leipziger Universitätsverlag
Language
English
Type
Article
Journal
Comparativ
Volume
27
Issue
1
97–110
About the Issue
The image of refugees cramming at an armed border post of a neighbouring country, pleading entry so as to avoid being sent back to the horrors engulfing their place of origin, is profoundly associated with the twentieth century. The modern consolidation of national borders, coupled with states’ ability to unabatingly exercise sovereign control over who enters them, has turned border posts the world over, whether on land or at the parting of territorial waters, into flashpoints of the global refugee crisis. Elapsing a century since the 1915 Armenian exile, this volume explores the challenge posed by refugees to sovereign nation states, as they are faced with the dilemma of inhumanely refusing their entry thus rendering themselves morally-repulsive, or allowing their entrance thus ipso facto qualifying their own sovereignty.