International Law

The Property Rights of Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons Beyond Restitution

By Anneke Smit
Routledge April 2012

Specifications

ISBN-13
9780415579605
Publisher
Routledge
Publication
April 2012
Format
Hardback , 260 pages
Jurisdiction
International ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

The Property Rights of Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons: Beyond Restitution explores how the protection of housing and property rights can contribute to durable solutions to displacement. The focus of most of the international community’s recent protection efforts has been on returning displaced persons to their homes following armed conflict. This prioritization has been entrenched further by the 2005 United Nations Principles on Housing and Property Restitution for Refugees and Displaced Persons (the "Pinheiro Principles"). Yet as Anneke Smit chronicles in this book, the international community’s attempts to promote widespread return through establishing housing and property restitution mechanisms have largely failed. Further, this focus on return and restitution of property has come at the expense of supporting effectively local integration and resettlement as possible durable solutions.

This book argues that, particularly in cases of protracted displacement, a range of accepted approaches to the protection of housing and property rights would be preferable. In addition to more than a dozen case studies, the discussion draws throughout on international human rights and refugee law, property law and theory, and sociological and anthropological literature on displacement and the meaning of ‘home’. The Property Rights of Refugees and Internally Displaced Personsis based on more than a decade of the author’s extensive academic research and practical experience on displacement issues. It will be of considerable interest to those with academic and policy interests in the rights of refugees and displaced persons, and theories of property. 

Table of Contents

Introduction; Chapter 1: The development of the right to return to one’s home of origin; Chapter 2:Modern experiences with post-conflict restitution and return; Chapter 3: Restitution and return ‘home’; Chapter 4:Local integration and the regularization of collective centre space; Chapter 5: Compensation and regularizing secondary occupation; Conclusion.

About the Author

Anneke Smit is Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Law, University of Windsor, Canada

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