Abstract
Refugee policies in the Global South have increasingly become the focus of international interest. However, there is little understanding about how these policies are shaped and managed in these Southern countries. This doctoral project aims to understand how national refugee policies are the outcome of political negotiations between different levels, and what implementation effects this has. Taking the national refugee policy as a vantage point, this project aims to understand the entire policy process of refugee policies at the global, national and local: In what way do these different levels influence each other, and what is the effect on the national and local refugee policy? Thus, this project aims to understand how refugee policies emerge, are negotiated and implemented. This novel approach has not been taken before, and will be done by using a case study: Uganda's refugee policy. The country is seen as a 'success story' in refugee governance: it is the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees flagship country for its key-policy, which was implemented in 2017. This project aims to conduct multi-sited field research at different levels: at the global level (New York and Geneva), the national level (Kampala) and the local level (two Ugandan refugee settlements). This will result in a ground-breaking research that provides more insights in the ways in which these different levels impact both on each other, and ultimately, on the quality of refugee policies itself.
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