Academic literature on the topic 'Refugee admittance'

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Journal articles on the topic "Refugee admittance"

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MILO, Andrianna. "THE CONCEPT REFUGEE IN THE DISCOURSES OF NEW MEDIA OF HUNGARY: “DEVELOPMENT OF A SINGLE VOICE"." Folia Philologica, no. 2 (2021): 33–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/folia.philologica/2021/2/4.

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The article is devoted to the study of the concept REFUGEE / MENEKÜLT in the discourse of new media of Hungary in 2015, marked by the migration crisis in Europe. Based on the results of content analysis with the use of the “Big Data” technology, a discourse-forming role of the concept REFUGEE / MENEKÜLT has been proven in relation to the ratio of government and public positions. Hungary has formed a strategy of a “single voice” of official media and social networks which systematically implement the strategic narrative “Refugees are a threat to Hungary”(“Menekültek veszélyt jelentenek Magyarországnak”). Hungary's unified national communicative strategy of non-admittance of refugees and the corresponding discourse as a type of social behavior were laid down by national consultations (a referendum) and in V. Orbán's speeches. The narratives and thematic groups of linguistic markers of social networks regarding the concept REFUGEE / MENEKÜLT mostly coincide with the narratives and messages of the official media which relay the policy of the of Hungarian government of the day. The development of the strategic narrative is carried out according to the following structural blocks: abstract, climax, outcome, essessment, conclusion. The “single voice”policy on the issue of refugees was implemented in Hungary through various communicative channels with a focus on all target audiences.
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MILO, Andrianna. "THE CONCEPT REFUGEE IN THE DISCOURSES OF NEW MEDIA OF HUNGARY: “DEVELOPMENT OF A SINGLE VOICE"." Folia Philologica, no. 2 (2021): 33–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/folia.philologica/2021/2/4.

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The article is devoted to the study of the concept REFUGEE / MENEKÜLT in the discourse of new media of Hungary in 2015, marked by the migration crisis in Europe. Based on the results of content analysis with the use of the “Big Data” technology, a discourse-forming role of the concept REFUGEE / MENEKÜLT has been proven in relation to the ratio of government and public positions. Hungary has formed a strategy of a “single voice” of official media and social networks which systematically implement the strategic narrative “Refugees are a threat to Hungary”(“Menekültek veszélyt jelentenek Magyarországnak”). Hungary's unified national communicative strategy of non-admittance of refugees and the corresponding discourse as a type of social behavior were laid down by national consultations (a referendum) and in V. Orbán's speeches. The narratives and thematic groups of linguistic markers of social networks regarding the concept REFUGEE / MENEKÜLT mostly coincide with the narratives and messages of the official media which relay the policy of the of Hungarian government of the day. The development of the strategic narrative is carried out according to the following structural blocks: abstract, climax, outcome, essessment, conclusion. The “single voice”policy on the issue of refugees was implemented in Hungary through various communicative channels with a focus on all target audiences.
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3

Opaas, Marianne, Tore Wentzel-Larsen, and Sverre Varvin. "The 10-year course of mental health, quality of life, and exile life functioning in traumatized refugees from treatment start." PLOS ONE 15, no. 12 (December 31, 2020): e0244730. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0244730.

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Refugee patients with severe traumatic experiences may need mental health treatment, but treatment results vary, and there is scarcity of studies demonstrating refugees’ long-term health and well-being after treatment. In a 10-year naturalistic and longitudinal study, 54 multi-origin traumatized adult refugee patients, with a background of war and persecution, and with a mean stay in Norway of 10.5 years, were recruited as they entered psychological treatment in mental health specialist services. The participants were interviewed face-to-face with multiple methods at admittance, and at varying points in time during and after psychotherapy. The aim was to study the participants’ trajectories of symptoms of post-traumatic stress, anxiety and depression, four aspects of quality of life, and two aspects of exile life functioning. Linear mixed effects analyses included all symptoms and quality of life measures obtained at different times and intervals for the participants. Changes in exile life functioning was investigated by exact McNemar tests. Participants responded to the quantitative assessments up to eight times. Length of therapy varied, with a mean of 61.3 sessions (SD = 74.5). The participants improved significantly in symptoms, quality of life, and exile life functioning. Improvement in symptoms of posttraumatic stress, anxiety, and depression yielded small effect sizes (r = .05 to .13), while improvement in quality of psychological and physical health yielded medium effect sizes (r = .38 and .32). Thus, long-time improvement after psychological therapy in these severely traumatized and mostly chronified refugee patients, was more notable in quality of life and exile life functioning than in symptom reduction. The results imply that major symptom reduction may not be attainable, and may not be the most important indication of long-term improvement among refugees with long-standing trauma-related suffering. Other indications of beneficial effects should be applied as well.
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Applegate, Toby Martin. "Slovenia: Post-Socialist and Neoliberal Landscapes in Response to the European Refugee Crisis." Human Geography 9, no. 2 (July 2016): 69–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/194277861600900207.

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As a nation-state, Slovenia represents an increasingly rare case wherein 80 percent of the country identifies as ethnically homogeneous. Even in the face of this fact, Slovenia's ethno-national identity has been called into question since its independence. The European refugee crisis has brought this questioning into sharp focus as the admittance, care and transfer of refugees has caused burdens not only economically and logistically, but also in terms of what it means to be Slovenian and European at the same time. In a place with little history of provision of care for large-scale refugee populations, the cultural and political frameworks of Slovene society do not possess the crisis response capacity that its Northern European neighbors might. In fact, Slovenia's record on human rights is not as stellar as is often presented to the world at large. This paper argues that Slovenia's place in Mitteleuropa serves as a hindrance to it as a place of social care and reaffirms certain historical conditions that render it a transitory space between The Other and the ‘real’ Europe. It relies upon field observations of how Slovenia organized its response to the crisis in the autumn of 2015 and criticizes those responses as reaffirming both the post-socialist transition and the neoliberal intent of its national infrastructure and political economy.
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Will, Anne-Kathrin. "On “Genuine” and “Illegitimate” Refugees: New Boundaries Drawn by Discriminatory Legislation and Practice in the Field of Humanitarian Reception in Germany." Social Inclusion 6, no. 3 (August 30, 2018): 172–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.17645/si.v6i3.1506.

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A high number of legal changes accompanied the increase of people seeking asylum in Germany throughout the 18th legislative period from 2013–2017. These changes have transformed the field of humanitarian reception in Germany, especially along the axes of citizenship, integration performance and deviation from administrative and legal rules. Half of the legal measures from this period have led to differential rights for different groups of asylum seekers according to one of these three axes. The axis of citizenship has also structured the development of administrative procedures referred to as “integrated refugee management” which was established to speed up asylum seeking processes, classifying persons applying for a humanitarian residence visa in Germany into four clusters. This categorization, too, led to different entitlements regarding the admittance to state-financed German courses and integration measures focussed on education and the labour market. In this article I employ the notion of differential inclusion (Mezzadra & Neilson, 2012) to analyse these legal and administrative changes. I show that they have reshaped the substructures impacting the lives of those categorized as “genuine” and “illegitimate” refugees and thus redrawn the boundaries and created hierarchies among those seeking humanitarian protection in Germany.
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Benhabib, Seyla. "Transformations of Citizenship: The Case of Contemporary Europe." Government and Opposition 37, no. 4 (October 2002): 439–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1477-7053.00110.

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In The Mid-Morning Hours Of 11 September 2001, Shortly After the second Twin Tower of the World Trade Center had collapsed, amidst the fog surrounding us all – who, when, why – I heard a brief item of news on the radio. Canada had closed its airspace to all American planes still en route; since US airports were also closed for several hours on that day, these pilots would have no choice but to return to their destinations or to circle the airs in search of ‘safe haven’. This news was not repeated. Canada eventually did permit US airplanes to land and many transatlantic passengers found safety in Iceland's Reykjavik airport for a period of time, up to several days in some cases.This small incident is one among the many in recent years that have made increasingly transparent the fragility of the territorially bounded and state-centric international order. For a few brief hours, the passengers of the airplanes that could not obtain landing permission were like refugees without first admittance claims. The same logic that permits states to deny first admittance to certain refugees and asylees, and often contrary to the Geneva Convention on the Status of Refugees, was operative in this instance as well. Invoking national security concerns, the USA's closest neighbour could, even if briefly, follow the imperatives of sovereign statehood and close its airspace as well as landing privileges to passengers who had now become ‘refugees in orbit‘ in the heavens.
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Lax, Violeta Moreno. "Must EU Borders have Doors for Refugees? On the Compatibility of Schengen Visas and Carriers' Sanctions with EU Member States' Obligations to Provide International Protection to Refugees." European Journal of Migration and Law 10, no. 3 (2008): 315–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/157181608x338180.

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AbstractWhereas the EU is developing a highly protective Common European Asylum System in purported compliance with the Geneva Convention, it is also displaying growing reluctance to provide unhindered access to it to those in need. The question of physical access to protection is ambiguously dealt with within EU law. On the one hand, it appears that entry to the Schengen zone has been designed disregarding refugees' entitlement 'to special protection'. Prior to admission, refugees seem to have been assimilated to the broader class of (potentially illegal) immigrants and thus required to submit to general immigration conditions, including visa. On the other hand, some isolated EU law rules give the impression that refugees are to be exonerated from normal admittance requirements.This article intends to show how, 'in the light of present day conditions,' a contextual, dynamic and teleological interpretation of Articles 31 and 33 of the Geneva Convention as well as of Articles 3 ECHR and 2(2) of Protocol 4 ECHR require that the second set of EU rules be appropriately furthered.
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Lovrenčić-Huzjan, Arijana, Marina Roje-Bedeković, and Neurology Collaboration Group. "The Impact of Patient’s Fear of COVID-19 Infection on Neurology Service in University Hospital Center Sestre Milosrdnice During COVID-19 Epidemic Outbreak." Archives of Psychiatry Research 57, no. 2 (June 1, 2021): 169–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.20471/dec.2021.57.02.05.

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Increasing evidence suggests that patients with medical emergencies are avoiding the emergency department because of fear of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection, leading to increased morbidity and mortality due to other diseases. In order to analyse the impact of patient’s fear of COVID-19 on the admittance rate of stroke patients and severity of neurological diseases, we compared the stroke admittance rate, numbers of thrombectomies and thrombolysis and hospitalization refusal rate during the time period from March 1st until June 30th 2020 in temporal relationship with the rising numbers of COVID-19 cases in Croatia. We assessed the patients’ neurologic disease severity measured by ventilation time and mortality rate in the same time period. We compared the data with the data obtained from the same time period in 2019. We observed dramatically decreased presentation in Neurologic Emergency Department due to stroke and neurologic disease in 2020 compared to 2019, increased refused hospitalization rate and similar stroke treatment rate despite bigger catchment area. Greater neurologic disease severity with almost 40% increased ventilation time and double mortality rate during the same time was observed. During the outbreak of COVID-19 epidemic, fear of infection had significant impact on neurologic service leading to decreased presentation to NED, resulting in increased stroke or neurologic disease-related morbidity and mortality.
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Min, Cris J., Cesar Iturriaga, Victoria Wang, and Rohit Verma. "COVID-19: Moral and Ethical Implications for Orthopaedic Spine Surgeons." Case Reports in Orthopedics 2021 (July 15, 2021): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/6682705.

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The rapid spread of COVID-19 has made a significant impact on healthcare systems worldwide, with a large influx of patients prompting the cancellation of elective surgery in order to conserve resources and prevent the risk of exposure to the novel virus. In this case report, we present a 66-year-old male patient, with a history of cerebral palsy and developmental disabilities, exhibiting an increasing loss of function over the course of 10 days amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The patient was initially refused transport to the hospital by emergency medical services and later transported per independent request from his surgeon. Upon admittance to the hospital, the patient was found to have severe spinal cord compression with myelopathic symptoms and underwent an anterior cervical discectomy and fusion. This case highlights the need for more specific guidelines regarding the evaluation of a spinal injury by EMS and the hospital system amid a national crisis.
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Ravichandran, S., and A. P. Babu. "Design and Development of Refuge and Retrieve Controller Estimation for Cloud Data Centers." Asian Journal of Computer Science and Technology 10, no. 2 (November 5, 2021): 34–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.51983/ajcst-2021.10.2.2921.

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Cloud server farms appropriate the common information to the clients. In cloud climate consumers' material is normally organized distantly in vague machineries that consumers don't claim or effort respectively. Client information control is decreased on information sharing under remote machines. Incorporated checking applications are not reasonable for profoundly powerful information access climate. Information access the executives should be possible through the cloud specialist co-ops (CSP). Cloud Data auditing plans are utilized to screen the common information esteems. Cloud Information Accountability (CIA) system is an exceptionally decentralized data responsibility model. CIA system joins parts of access control, use control and validation. Two unmistakable modes are produced for inspecting push mode and pull mode. The push mode alludes to logs being occasionally shipped off the information proprietor or partner. The force mode alludes to the client or one more approved party can recover the logs depending on the situation. Container (Java ARchives) records are utilized to consequently log the use of the clients' information by any substance in the cloud. Circulated evaluating systems are additionally used to fortify client's control. The information are sending alongside access control approaches and logging arrangements encased in JAR records, to cloud specialist organizations. Any admittance to the information will trigger a mechanized and verified logging system nearby to the JARs. The Push and Pull mode log recovery calculation is utilized for the log the board interaction. Information evaluating and security plans are coordinated to give client log data to the common information. The Cloud Information Accountability (CIA) system is improved to give verification plan to JAR records. The framework consolidates the information and runtime uprightness check measure. Log information examination is furnished with ordering and collection capacities. The framework incorporates information and executable access control model.
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Books on the topic "Refugee admittance"

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Office, General Accounting. Soviet refugees: Processing and admittance to the United States has improved : report to the Chairmen, Senate and House Committees on the Judiciary, and the Honorable Frank R. Lautenberg, U.S. Senate. Washington, D.C: U.S. General Accounting Office, 1991.

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United States. General Accounting Office, ed. Soviet refugees: Processing and admittance to the United States : report to Congressional requesters. Washington, D.C: The Office, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "Refugee admittance"

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Demetrious, Kristin. "“Borderlands”." In Public Relations and Neoliberalism, 148—C5.N109. Oxford University PressNew York, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190678395.003.0006.

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Abstract The burnt reality of displaced people, gathering at the gate powerful nation-states, trying to gain admittance and to gain acceptance, has kindled a defining public debate of this century. It is also a debate in which public relations language practices by government and business, and more broadly in society, play a powerful role in narrowing cultural dispositions in ways that passively tolerate or accept prescribed neoliberalist policy settings. To understand the “borderland” as a third space and field of ideas—namely, immigration, refugees, and statelessness—this chapter explores how public relations language practices combine to represent them as “categories.” Connoting certain words, woven into a plot that pushes meaning within set routes, this neonarrative works in both obvious and less obvious ways, to diminish the public’s expectations in human rights matters, to harden stances, and to build consent, while at the same time promoting a particular relationship between culture and politics. And in this, it has been extraordinarily successful.
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Ramsey, Sonya Y. "Planting the Seed." In Bertha Maxwell-Roddey, 66–100. University Press of Florida, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813069326.003.0004.

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As the University of North Carolina at Charlotte’s College of Human Development’s first Black assistant professor in 1970, Maxwell soon found herself again at the center of controversy as the founding director of the university’s new Black Studies Program (BSP). After contextualizing Maxwell’s experiences from 1970 to 1974 within the backdrop Bonnie Cone’s founding of UNC Charlotte and the rising Black Studies Movement, this chapter describes how Maxwell worked with student activists including Benjamin Chavis and T. J. Reddy and faculty such as Ann C. Carver, Beverly Ford, and Mary Harper to merge the themes of teacher-led, segregation-era, educational racial uplift with cultural nationalism to create an academically rigorous block curriculum that focused on Black self-identity formation and community service. By creating a physical refuge for Black students and establishing student support programs, Maxwell’s BSP expanded the role of the desegregated university beyond the admittance of a few token African American students.
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