Due to a number of factors ranging from economic, asylum, leisure etc. coupled with technological advancements, moving globally from point A to B has been made easier. Movement across boarders however has legal implications depending on the basis of the movement. Persons moving from point A to point B ought to have good reason for them to be granted entry into the receiving state. This module examines the laws that regulate the movements of people from one country to another. It looks at immigration ordinarily that is, not founded on fear of persecution in the country of origin to immigration based on well-founded fear of persecution that is, immigration for purposes of seeking asylum in the host state. The module explains what immigration is and the different forms there are. It examines the factors that cause immigration and what obligation the host states have towards immigrants. The module examines who an asylum seeker/refugee is.
OBJECTIVES
The objectives of this module are:
LEARNING OUTCOMES
At the end of this module you should be able to:
UNIT 1 – IMMIGRATION AND REFUGEE LAW: AN INTRODUCTION
UNIT 2 – IMMIGRATION
UNIT 3 – INFORMAL MIGRATION
UNIT 4 – REFUGEE LAW
RECOMMENDED READING:
Vedsted-Hansen Jens. (2015). The Refugee Law Reader: Cases, Documents and Materials. Budapest: Hungarian Helsinki Committee
Chirwa J. (2020). A Concise Manual of Immigration, Refugee and Citizenship in Zambia. Juta Publication