PUBLI : Ulrike Krause, « Colonial roots of the 1951 Refugee Convention and its effects on the global refugee regime », Journal of International Relations and Development, 2021

Abstract

The foun­ding of the 1951 Refugee Conven­tion and today’s global refugee regime have mainly been linked to the Second World War and to the early phase of the Cold War in research. But what role does colo­nia­lism play here ? This article comple­ments Post­co­lo­nial and Igno­rance Studies and uses online archival research to explore debates among state dele­ga­tions about the Convention’s refugee defi­ni­tion and ‘colo­nial clause’ at the foun­ding confe­rence (2–25 July 1951). It illu­mi­nates dele­ga­tions’ stra­tegic produc­tion of know­ledge and espe­cially ignorance—meaning the construc­tion of issues as irrelevant—leading to the prio­ri­ti­sa­tion of ‘the West’ over ‘the Rest’. Colo­nial and impe­rial states gene­rally domi­nated debates while colo­nised ones were excluded, and thus silenced. Despite broad support for the universal refugee defi­ni­tion, several powerful dele­ga­tions demanded its limi­ta­tion to Europe and there­with stra­te­gi­cally subor­di­nated and ignored the ‘Other’ refu­gees and regions in pursuit of geopo­li­tical inter­ests. They thus made the colo­nial ‘Others’ irre­le­vant in the crea­tion of ‘inter­na­tional’ refugee law. I argue that these debates rendered the Convention’s foun­ding ‘colo­nial-igno­rant’, with lasting effects for the regime’s functioning.

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