2009
This book is about the UN Convention on Migrant Workers’ Right, migration and human rights: the uneasy but essential relationship, role of civil society in campaigning for and using in ICRMW, committee on Migrant workers and implementation of the ICRMW, migrants’ rights in UN human rights conventions, the need for a rights-based approach to migration in the age of globalization, obstacles to, opportunities for, ratification of the ICRMW in Asia, obstacles to ratification of the ICRMW in Canada, Mexico’s role in promoting and implementing the ICRMW, migrants’ right after apartheid: South African responses to the ICRMW, policy on the ICRMW in the United Kingdom, the French political refusal on Europe’s behalf, migration and human rights in Germany, migration and human rights in Italy: prospects for the ICRMW and the ICRMW and the European Union.
1-474
New York
Cambridge University Press.
UN Convention and law for migrant rights
General relevance - all sectors
Policy analysis
Policymakers and Researchers
America - North, European Union, Canada, United States, Ontario, Alberta, México, Manitoba, Quebec, British Columbia, Other provinces, Africa - North , America - Central & Caribbeans, America - South, Africa - Subsaharian, Europe Non-EU, Federal, Asia, China, Guatemala, Jamaica, South Africa, Philippines, Honduras, Colombia, Equator, Other Caribbean States, Haiti, Cuba, Dominican Repulic, Bangladesh, India, Thailand, El Salvador, Nova Scotia, United Kingdom, France, Italy, Spain, Germany, Albania, Moldova, Ukraine, Romania, Vietnam, Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, Netherlands, Sweden, Austria, Lithuania, Hungary, Poland, Peru, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Pakistan, and Malaysia
English