06/09/2014

Asylum Access and The Refugee Work Rights Coalition release Global Refugee Work Rigths Report


Asylum Access and the Refugee Work Rights Coalition have recently released the publication, Global Refugee Work Rights Report 2014: Taking the Movement from Theory to PracticeWe reproduce hereafter the abstract of this major paper (as posted on Asylum Access Refugee Work Rights blog). 

The report examines the laws, policies and practices for refugee work rights in 15 countries around the globe (affecting a total of 30% of the world’s refugee population). The reports' findings reveal that almost half of the 15 countries examined in the report have a complete legal bar to refugee employment, and in the countries where some legal right to work exists, significant de-facto barriers to employment, like strict encampment, exorbitant permit fees or widespread discrimination, undermine refugees’ ability to access lawful employment.
In simple terms, refugees’ work rights are respected as the exception, not the rule.
The publication also calls upon stakeholders – governments, UN agencies, civil society, refugee and local communities – to take concrete steps to bring national employment laws and policies around the world into line with international human rights and refugee law standards. In doing so, the report (i) provides a breakdown of the right to work under international law, which may be used by advocates to inform policy makers of their legal commitments; (ii) an explanation of the economic arguments in favor of granting refugees’ work rights, which may be used to supplement legal arguments; and (iii) concrete recommendations for achieving legal reform, and administrative and judicial support for work rights domestically.

02/09/2014

UNCHR Website on Urban Refugee Programs and best Practices

The Website on Urban Refugee Programs and Best Practices is a place to look for resources and insights on effective programming for urban refugees. This collaborative project is meant to serve as a compilation of positive examples of urban refugee services. These best practices are categorized by sector, organization, and geographic location so users can easily search for the information most relevant to them. Check it out, and help the site grow by submitting your own success stories!


Brochure on the right to work of refugees in Kenya (in French, Somali and Oromo)

The International Rescue Committee and the Refugee Consortium of Kenya have produced brochures to inform refugees residing in Kenya of their right to work. This brochure perfectly illustrates the need for awareness campaigns to inform refugees of their rights.

Right to Work Brochures

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These materials educate refugees on their right to access employment.  Available in FrenchSomali, andOromo.

Refugees' Right to work is vital to individual dignity said Kenyan High Court (July 2013)

We reproduce hereafter an extract of the first High Court ruling (26 july 2013) quashing the Kenyan government directive planning to send urban refugees living in Nairobi into refugee camps. This extracts recalls that the right to work of urban refugees contributes to human dignity and allows for self-sufficiency of refugees. 

Right to dignity
The petitioners and other refugees have established roots in the country and are productive residents and if the policy is implemented they will be uprooted from their homes and neighbourhoods in what is intended to be a security operation.

Kenya: decades of integration efforts by refugees at stake

We would like to reproduce an article by James Stapelton, International coordinator at the Jesuit Refugee Service and Professor of Human Rights published in June 2014 on the situation of urban refugees in Kenya (see also our previous post on the same topic: Unlawful Refugees' transfer to violate human rights dating 22/01/2013).
The right to work and live a decent life of self- sufficient urban refugees is again at stake in Kenya...
JRS | KENYA: DES DÉCADES D’INTÉGRATION DES RÉFUGIÉS MISES À MAL, publié le 20 août 2014