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Iraqi Forced Migrants in Jordan: Conditions, Religious Networks and the Smuggling Process

Authored by: Géraldine Chatelard

Categories: Human Rights
Sub-Categories: Economic Participation, Economic Recovery, International Law, Migration
Country: Jordan
Region: Middle East and North Africa
Year: 2003
Citation: Chatelard, Géraldine. "Iraqi Forced Migrants in Jordan: Conditions, Religious Networks and the Smuggling Process." WIDER Discussion Papers No. 2003/34, World Institute for Development Economics, 2003.

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Abstract

This paper describes and analyses the case of Iraqis who, in the 1990s, have arrived in Jordan as forced migrants, and have continued to Western Europe or Australia as asylum migrants. The argument put forth is that trends of asylum migration cannot be fully understood without looking at a set of interrelated issues in the countries of first reception of the forced migrants: reception standards, the migrants’ poor socioeconomic conditions, further violations of their human rights, but also the functioning of the migrants’ social networks and of human smuggling rings.