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Emerging Issues in Forced Migration - Perspectives from Research and Practice Special Focus: Emerging Issues in Forced Migration - Perspectives from Research and Practice Volume IV Spring 2020 ISSN 2371-9001 www.espminetwork.com Refugee Review is an e-publication of the The Emerging Scholars and Practitioners on Migration Issues Network Refugee Review Emerging Issues in Forced Migration - Perspectives from Research and Practice An e-publication of the ESPMI Network www.espminetwork/refugee_review.com Volume 4, Number 1, May 2020 ISSN: 2371-9001 The Emerging Scholars and Practitioners on Migration Issues Network (ESPMI Network) can be found online at www.espminetwork.com. The opinions and statements found in Refugee Review: Emerging Issues in Forced Migration - Perspectives from Research and Practice are solely those of the authors and do not represent the views of the ESPMI Network or its editors, peer reviewers, supporters, or other participating contributors. This material is protected through a Creative Commons copyright. Please contact [email protected] with questions. To reference work within this e-journal, please use the following attribution style (or a standardized variation that includes the following information): Author, “Article Title,” Refugee Review: Emerging Issues in Forced Migration - Perspectives from Research and Practice, Vol 4, No 1(2020): Page Number, accessed date, url. Please note that papers are printed in the dialectical preference of their author; American, British and Canadian English are present. ESPMI NETWORK www.espminetwork.com Refugee Review: Emerging Issues in Forced Migration Index Refugee Review: Emerging Issues in Forced Migration – Perspectives from Research and Practice Acknowledgements ......................................................................................................................................... 5 Managing Editors' Statement.......................................................................................................................... 6 ACADEMIC ARTICLES Imaginary Objects, Imaginary Palestine: Exploring Methodological Challenges and Opportunities in Ethnographic Research in the Context of the Nahr El-Bared Refugee Camp FABIANO SARTORI & MBONGENI NGULUBE ........................................................................................ 9 Refugee Testimony and Human Rights Advocacy: The Challenges of Interviewing Refugees “In the Field” MATT OLIVER KINSELLA ....................................................................................................................... 21 Critical Reflections on Conducting Elite Interviews on Forced Migration in Small Island Developing States NATALIE DIETRICH JONES ..................................................................................................................... 32 Agent-Based Modeling Within Forced Migration Research: A Review and Critique ERIKA FRYDENLUND & CHRISTA DE KOCK ....................................................................................... 53 From Policy Irrelevance to a Return to Relevance: Active Strategies in Forced Migration Research ODESSA GONZALEZ BENSON, FRANCIS TOM TEMPROSA& SURA SHLEBAH ................................ 69 Negotiating Humanitarian Aid at Europe’s Borders: Lessons from Lesvos STEPHANIE SHILLINGLAW ..................................................................................................................... 84 Refugee Integration in South Africa and the Challenges of International Protection Laws OLAWALE LAWAL .................................................................................................................................. 101 Extraterritorial Application of Non-Refoulement: Triggering the Prohibition on the High Seas JENNY POON ............................................................................................................................................ 114 PRACTITIONER AND FIELD REPORTS Refugee Issues in Southeast Asia: Narrowing the Gaps between Theory, Policy, and Reality MELATI NUNGSARI, SAM FLANDERS & HUI YIN CHUAH ................................................................ 129 3 ESPMI NETWORK www.espminetwork.com Refugee Review: Emerging Issues in Forced Migration Informal Solidarity Networks with Asylum Seekers and Refugees: A Practitioner’s Perspective DORA REBELO ......................................................................................................................................... 147 From DIY Simple to DNA Sample: Obstacles to Family Reunification for Afghan Children with Refugee Parents in Germany MAJA GRUNDLER & MELANIE TORRES GUTIÉRREZ ...................................................................... 159 OPINION PIECES “Mud Feet” - Displacement and Prejudice After Environmental Disaster in Brazil LUCIANA COSTA DIAS ........................................................................................................................... 172 Thinking Beyond Gendered Challenges: Experiences of a (Female) Aid Worker-Ethnographer in Jordan’s Refugee Camps MELISSA GATTER ................................................................................................................................... 183 Fragile Coexistence in Turkey: Addressing the Gaps in the Implementation of Refugee Integration Policies SALIH TOSUN & ENES AYASLI .............................................................................................................. 191 4 ESPMI NETWORK www.espminetwork.com Refugee Review: Emerging Issues in Forced Migration Acknowledgements Editor-in-chief Dacia Douhaibi Managing Editor Nikolett Szelei Editors Abdullah Atmacasöy, Patrick Ciaschi, Bani Gill, Andy Jolly, Lewis Turner, Krystyna Wojnarowicz Reviewers Abdullah Atmacasöy, Munira Abdulwasi, Neelofar Ahmed, Tamara Al-Yakoub, Patrick Ciaschi, Yuriko Cowper-Smith, Eda Farsakoglu, Theodoros Fouskas, Erika Frydenlund, Ina Jahn, Andy Jolly, Matt Oliver Kinsella, Christa De Kock, Christa Kuntzelman, Luigi Limone, Jay Ramasubramanyam, Güvenc Sahin, Nikolett Szelei, Lewis Turner Copy Editors Abdullah Atmacasöy, Patrick Ciaschi, Dacia Douhaibi, Bani Gill, Archana Sivakumaran, Nikolett Szelei, Lewis Turner Website Claire Ellis Supporters The International Association for the Study of Forced Migration (IASFM), Susan McGrath, Michele Millard, Jennifer Hyndman, Christina Clark-Kazack, The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC). The ESPMI Network would particularly like to thank the Refugee Research Network and the funding support it has received through the related SSHRC Strategic Research Clusters Grant. This funding has allowed members of the Executive Committee of the ESPMI Network to travel several times to meet with one another and to liaise with others in the field, at conferences such as the Canadian Association for Refugee and Forced Migration Studies (CARFMS) and the International Association for the Study or Forced Migration (IASFM). 5 ESPMI NETWORK www.espminetwork.com Refugee Review: Emerging Issues in Forced Migration Managing Editors' Statement Welcome to the fourth volume of Refugee Review, the open access, multidisciplinary, multimedia, and peer-reviewed journal of the ESPMI Network. We are delighted to be able to share with you another rich edition of varied and challenging articles, opinion pieces and practitioner reports from emerging scholars and practitioners around the world. Refugee Review is an open-access, peer-reviewed e-journal that features a range of submission styles by migrants past and present, emerging and established scholars, practitioners, artists, photojournalists, activists, and anyone else connected to the field of forced migration. Refugee Review is an independent platform, offering a unique publishing opportunity for early-stage professionals, as well as for established scholars that support its mission. Refugee Review has a commitment to equity, respect, and honours the dignity of all persons. We believe that the multidisciplinary and multi-locative nature of forced migration calls for a broad submission invitation, a rigorous but collaborative peer-review process, and an open-access platform. We are committed to working closely with contributors to develop and polish their work, focussed on the presentation of research and work that has allegiance less to particular institutions or geographies, and more to the lessons we can draw from utilizing the collective brilliance of the many institutions, non-profit organizations, projects, and personal involvements that our authors draw from and contribute to. We hope that this is journal can, in a small way, act as a venue for bringing multiple strains of work and study from a diverse group of people into closer proximity for those that seek to know more about forced migration. We are incredibly proud to have worked directly with over thirty emerging scholars and practitioners who shared their work, and a team of twenty-four peer reviews and editors to bring the fourth edition of our journal forward. Scholars and practitioners worldwide are grappling with key questions related to research and practice, particularly concerning ethics, representation, and impact. This issue of the Refugee Review set out to explore and expand these issues by focusing on four areas in forced migration research and praxis: methodological challenges and innovations, bridging research to policy and practice, new dissemination practices and public engagement, and supporting emerging scholars and practitioners. The articles presented in this volume address two of these areas most explicitly: methodological
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