This book presents an original framework of transnational asylum to inform future cooperation between states on asylum processing and refugee protection.
The book provides scholarly guidance on how policies can be undertaken in a way that conforms with the rights of asylum seekers and refugees under international law, asking if transnational asylum offers a workable model for lawful international cooperation. It engages with the practical and legal modalities needed to ensure respect for binding obligations in the context of the current general trend of rejection of territorial asylum. The book puts forward a blueprint for how existing policies of deterrence and externalisation can be retooled to share, rather than shift, responsibility for refugees.
This book will be of key interests to scholars, students, policymakers and practitioners interested and working in Human Rights, International Refugee Law and Refugee Studies.