University of Sussex
Browse

Offshoring refugees: colonial echoes of the UK-Rwanda migration and economic development partnership

Download (454.74 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2023-08-16, 10:51 authored by Michael CollyerMichael Collyer, Uttara Shahani

British proposals to forcibly deport asylum seekers to Rwanda have raised fierce opposition from across the political spectrum in the UK and internationally. These proposals differ from official practices of deportation as they have developed in liberal democracies since the 1970s. There are certainly some international parallels, such as Australia’s ‘Pacific Solution’ of ‘offshoring’ asylum, which is often cited as an inspiration. Yet a much clearer precedent involving the forcible movement of people to countries where they have no personal or legal connection existed for many years in the British Empire. Colonial policies of forcible removal, relocation, displacement, and dispersal around the Empire are well established. We draw attention to these longer histories before investigating more recent cases of the dispersal of refugees within the British Empire in the twentieth century. In many cases, such forced dispersal concerned those who had been recognised as refugees who were interned and subsequently moved elsewhere in the Empire. Such policies were designed to prevent the arrival of refugees in the UK. These policies have provided inspiration for asylum practices in some postcolonial states—Israel is reported to have reached an agreement with Uganda and Rwanda to deport asylum seekers from Sudan and Eritrea, although these are not public. In this paper, we highlight how these colonial practices of forcible displacement of individuals inform the current agreement between the UK and Rwanda.

Funding

Borders, global governance and the refugee, 1947-51 : BRITISH ACADEMY

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Published version

Journal

Social Sciences

ISSN

2076-0760

Publisher

MDPI AG

Issue

8

Volume

12

Article number

451

Department affiliated with

  • Geography Publications

Staff notes

Item deposited via Symplectic Elements on: 2023-08-16 Item deposited by: Prof Michael Collyer (M.Collyer@sussex.ac.uk) Elements publication ID: 316484 Depositor requested a reuse licence: Attribution - CC BY Reuse licence ID: 2 Depositor's reuse licence comment:

Usage metrics

    University of Sussex (Publications)

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC