FMR 39 Migrants caught in crisis
A number of new initiatives point to ways in which the international community, particularly governments, could help reduce the vulnerabilities of mig...
FMR 39 Newly recognised humanitarian actors
'New' humanitarian leaders are growing in profile, impact and capacity. They need to be recognised as equals by the international humanitarian communi...
FMR 39 Protection for migrants after the Libyan Revolution
Irregular and mixed migration is still of great concern in post-revolutionary Libya, made more complex by the securitisation of border control issues ...
FMR 39
The Dublin II Regulation makes the first safe country of refuge solely responsible for refugees and asylum seekers. In the case of Italy, the first re...
FMR 39 From commitment to practice: the EU response
The EU's response to events in North Africa in 2011 indicates that more is needed to translate a commitment to solidarity from limited aid and stateme...
FMR 39 Looking beyond legal status to human need
What humanitarians can expect more of in the future is more mixed flows defying rigid categorisation and calling for a humanitarian response based on ...
FMR 39 Protecting and assisting migrants caught in crises
The 2011 Libya crisis brought into sharp focus how global migration patterns are re-defining the range and type of needs and vulnerabilities of person...
FMR 39 We are not all Egyptian
For many refugees in Egypt the weeks of the revolution were marked by isolation, fear and brutality. In the aftermath of the revolution, the promise o...