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Home > Constrained by its Roots: How the Origins of the Global Asylum System Limit Contemporary Protection

Reports
January 2017

Constrained by its Roots: How the Origins of the Global Asylum System Limit Contemporary Protection

By  Randall Hansen
Border Security
Smuggling & Trafficking
International Governance
International Cooperation
International Organizations
Refugee & Asylum Policy
Asylum Seekers
Refugees & Resettlement
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Territorial asylum—the principle that a refugee must reach the territory of a host country in order to lodge a protection claim—has evolved as the principal mechanism for providing humanitarian protection. However, the refugee regime was designed to cope with regular, manageable outflows, not mass displacement. With unprecedented global displacement, with 65.3 million displaced persons in 2015, the territorial asylum system is overwhelmed. And fewer than 1 percent of displaced people in need of protection are resettled annually.

Making access to protection contingent upon access to territory has been criticized as at best inefficient, and at worst deadly. It creates powerful incentives for asylum seekers to undertake dangerous, illegal journeys, often at the hands of smugglers, which come at high human and financial costs. But efforts to decouple access to territory from access to protection—either by processing applications in countries of first asylum or at consulates, or by resettling people directly from countries of first asylum—have remained small in scale.

This Transatlantic Council on Migration report considers whether there are viable alternatives to territorial asylum, and explores how they might be implemented. Among the solutions proposed by the author: expanding resettlement, increasing financial responsibility sharing, and concentrating resources where most refugees can be found: in the Global South.

Table of Contents 

I. Introduction

II. The Origins of the Current Territorial Asylum System

A. The UN Refugee System in the Aftermath of World War II

B. The UN Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees

C. International Developments Favoring Territorial Asylum

III. Territorial Asylum in Practice

A. Territorial Asylum in Traditional Countries of Immigration in the 1980s and 1990s

B. The State Strikes Back: Externalizing Asylum Controls in the West

C. Europe’s Current Refugee Crisis

D. Refugees in the Global South

IV. Alternatives to Territorial Asylum

Is Offshore Processing Realistic?

V. Policy Recommendations

A. Recommendation I: Expand Resettlement

B. Recommendation II: Expand (Financial) Responsibility Sharing

C. Recommendation III: Concentrate the Resources Where the Refugees Are

VI. Conclusions

Media Resources

Contact 

Michelle Mittelstadt
202-266-1910
[email protected]

Experts 
Photo of Kathleen Newland

Kathleen Newland is a Senior Fellow and Co-Founder of the Migration Policy Institute. Full Bio >

Elizabeth Collett is a Global Fellow at MPI. Full Bio >

Photo of Susan Fratzke

Susan Fratzke is a Senior Policy Analyst with MPI’s International Program. Full Bio >

Links 

Transatlantic Council Development series


Source URL:https://www.migrationpolicy.org/research/constrained-its-roots-how-origins-global-asylum-system-limit-contemporary-protection