This website uses cookies

We use cookies to enhance your experience and support COUNTER Metrics for transparent reporting of readership statistics. Cookie data is not sold to third parties or used for marketing purposes.

Skip to main content
null
GJIL
  • Menu
  • Articles
    • Administrative Law
    • Book Reviews
    • Conflicts and International Politics
    • Education
    • Environmental Law
    • Gender and International Law
    • Human Rights
    • Immigration Law
    • International Law
    • Law and Religion
    • All
  • For Authors
  • Editorial Board
  • About
  • Issues
  • Blog
  • Annual Symposium
  • search
  • RSS feed (opens a modal with a link to feed)

RSS Feed

Enter the URL below into your favorite RSS reader.

http://localhost:6165/feed
Immigration Law
Vol. 19, Issue 2, 2016April 11, 2016 PDT

Indebted Asylum: Why the Travel Loan Requirement for Refugees is a Failure of the United States to Meet its Obligations Under the Convention on the Status of Refugees

Steven Sacco,
human rightsconvention on the status of refugeesrefugeetravel loanasylum
Photo by Frank Vex on Unsplash
GJIL
Steven Sacco, Indebted Asylum: Why the Travel Loan Requirement for Refugees Is a Failure of the United States to Meet Its Obligations Under the Convention on the Status of Refugees, 19 GJIL (2016).

View more stats

Powered by Scholastica, the modern academic journal management system