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The Conversation
The Conversation
Politics
Fabrice Rousselot, Global Editor, The Conversation

Global series: World in Exile

The Coast Guard Cutter Mohawk crew interdicts a group of Haitian migrants July 11, 2017, approximately 22 miles south of Great Inagua, Bahamas. Coast Guard News/flickr, CC BY-ND

Earlier this week, the United States Coast Guard found 102 Haitians crowded aboard a barely seaworthy boat near the Bahamas, fleeing their hurricane-tattered country. The image starkly recalled the refugee crisis in the Mediterranean, where so many people from Syria and the Middle East have perished while making their perilous way to Europe.

Mass migration is nothing new, but migration today is so global, and so unrelenting, that it may well be the great humanitarian issue of our time. Our series World in Exile offers in-depth reporting on immigrants and asylum-seekers, from Central America and Turkey to Myanmar and the US.


Refugee or migrant? Sometimes the line is blurred

There are refugees, there are migrants and then there are the millions of people who live in legal limbo because they defy easy categorisation. But everyone is just looking for a place to call home.

The hidden reasons why Mexican women flee their homes

Job opportunities and cartel violence aren’t the only reason Mexicans head north to the United States. More than 44% of Mexican women face violence at home, and some of them are seeking asylum across the border.

Through art and song, Rohingya refugees reclaim their lives

The music and drawings of Myanmar’s “floating people”, the Rohingya, are a form of resistance against the persecution they face both at home and as refugees in Bangladesh.

Can Turkey integrate 2.7 million Syrian refugees?

In some Turkish border cities, the number of refugees is now greater than that of the local population. Integrating large populations of migrants and asylum seekers means much more than simply offering citizenship.

Muslims in Trump’s America: the inside story

We must know people as they would like to be known and not as some dominant power — the president of the United States, say — has decided to portray them.

The Conversation

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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