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Between a Rock and a hard Place Exploring Xenophobia and Voluntary Refugee Repatriation in South Africa

In October 2019, thousands of migrants, refugees and asylum-seekers took the streets in Cape Town and Pretoria to publicly express their dissatisfaction with their living and protection conditions in South Africa. The protests erupted one month after a series of xenophobic incidents in several urban...

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Main Author: Görgmeier, Anne Juliane Ulrike
Other Authors: Scanlon, Helen
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Political Studies 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Görgmeier, Anne Juliane Ulrike
author2 Scanlon, Helen
author_browse Görgmeier, Anne Juliane Ulrike
Scanlon, Helen
author_facet Scanlon, Helen
Görgmeier, Anne Juliane Ulrike
author_sort Görgmeier, Anne Juliane Ulrike
collection Thesis
description In October 2019, thousands of migrants, refugees and asylum-seekers took the streets in Cape Town and Pretoria to publicly express their dissatisfaction with their living and protection conditions in South Africa. The protests erupted one month after a series of xenophobic incidents in several urban areas. While Pretoria protests dissolved quickly, the Cape Town sit-in protests were only cleared in early 2020. In both cities, protesters claimed that poor living conditions, a lack of access to services and a constant fear of xenophobic violence and harassment had made it unbearable for them to sustain their lives in South Africa. Refugees and asylum-seekers therefore demanded improved protection and the resettlement to a safer third country. Third country resettlement forms one of the three durable solutions for refugee situation as defined by the UNHCR, besides local integration and voluntary repatriation. The South African government and the UNHCR, however, made it clear that third country resettlement could not be considered a solution for a majority of South Africa's refugees and asylum-seekers. With local integration equally failing the forced migrants in South Africa, voluntary repatriation may by default be their only option left. This study aims to explore the relation between xenophobia and voluntary refugee repatriation in a South African context. The fear of xenophobic violence that was expressed by the 2019 protesters raises doubt about South Africa's ability to meet the UNHCR's standards of refugee protection. At the same time, it compromises the protection measure of temporary local integration as outlined in the South African 1998 Refugee Act. This study will therefore explore he connection between conditions of asylum in South Africa and the decision-making process on repatriation by refugees and asylum-seekers. This study aims to contribute to better the understanding of conditions and dynamics that lead to spontaneous voluntary repatriation in refugee situations.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35782 Between a Rock and a hard Place Exploring Xenophobia and Voluntary Refugee Repatriation in South Africa Görgmeier, Anne Juliane Ulrike Scanlon, Helen Forced Migration Refugee Protection Xenophobia Durable Solutions Voluntary Refugee Repatriation South Africa In October 2019, thousands of migrants, refugees and asylum-seekers took the streets in Cape Town and Pretoria to publicly express their dissatisfaction with their living and protection conditions in South Africa. The protests erupted one month after a series of xenophobic incidents in several urban areas. While Pretoria protests dissolved quickly, the Cape Town sit-in protests were only cleared in early 2020. In both cities, protesters claimed that poor living conditions, a lack of access to services and a constant fear of xenophobic violence and harassment had made it unbearable for them to sustain their lives in South Africa. Refugees and asylum-seekers therefore demanded improved protection and the resettlement to a safer third country. Third country resettlement forms one of the three durable solutions for refugee situation as defined by the UNHCR, besides local integration and voluntary repatriation. The South African government and the UNHCR, however, made it clear that third country resettlement could not be considered a solution for a majority of South Africa's refugees and asylum-seekers. With local integration equally failing the forced migrants in South Africa, voluntary repatriation may by default be their only option left. This study aims to explore the relation between xenophobia and voluntary refugee repatriation in a South African context. The fear of xenophobic violence that was expressed by the 2019 protesters raises doubt about South Africa's ability to meet the UNHCR's standards of refugee protection. At the same time, it compromises the protection measure of temporary local integration as outlined in the South African 1998 Refugee Act. This study will therefore explore he connection between conditions of asylum in South Africa and the decision-making process on repatriation by refugees and asylum-seekers. This study aims to contribute to better the understanding of conditions and dynamics that lead to spontaneous voluntary repatriation in refugee situations. 2022-02-21T07:46:35Z 2022-02-21T07:46:35Z 2021 2022-02-15T12:25:39Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35782 eng application/pdf Department of Political Studies Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Forced Migration
Refugee Protection
Xenophobia
Durable Solutions
Voluntary Refugee Repatriation
South Africa
Görgmeier, Anne Juliane Ulrike
Between a Rock and a hard Place Exploring Xenophobia and Voluntary Refugee Repatriation in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Between a Rock and a hard Place Exploring Xenophobia and Voluntary Refugee Repatriation in South Africa
title_full Between a Rock and a hard Place Exploring Xenophobia and Voluntary Refugee Repatriation in South Africa
title_fullStr Between a Rock and a hard Place Exploring Xenophobia and Voluntary Refugee Repatriation in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Between a Rock and a hard Place Exploring Xenophobia and Voluntary Refugee Repatriation in South Africa
title_short Between a Rock and a hard Place Exploring Xenophobia and Voluntary Refugee Repatriation in South Africa
title_sort between a rock and a hard place exploring xenophobia and voluntary refugee repatriation in south africa
topic Forced Migration
Refugee Protection
Xenophobia
Durable Solutions
Voluntary Refugee Repatriation
South Africa
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35782
work_keys_str_mv AT gorgmeierannejulianeulrike betweenarockandahardplaceexploringxenophobiaandvoluntaryrefugeerepatriationinsouthafrica