Description
Human rights and migration policy leave no person in a nation unaffected. Due to the recent Syrian refugee crisis, the world stage has been critically put to the test for its border policies and the infrastructure it can provide for refugees. It is an imperative to reflect on the successes and shortcomings of this ongoing issue in order to build more sustainable and impactful infrastructure for future migrant resettlement. This paper analyzes Sweden, Germany, and Jordan through a lens focused on government and social development and the correlating impact on Syrian refugees. By evaluating government entities and non-government organizations, while also interviewing Syrian refugees themselves, this paper builds a framework for understanding the global stage’s response to the Syrian refugee crisis. Out of this framework are recommendations for more effective resettlement practices, developed via retrospective analysis.
Details
Contributors
- McGirr, Aidan John (Author)
- Ferry, Lara (Thesis director)
- Briggs, Jason (Committee member)
- Englund, Galen (Committee member)
- School of Human Evolution & Social Change (Contributor)
- School of Earth and Space Exploration (Contributor)
- Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2020-05
Resource Type
Language
- eng
Additional Information
English
Series
- Academic Year 2019-2020
Extent
- 75 pages