Examples of Convention refugee in a sentence
Practitioners will likely continue to argue before courts for a human rights- based approach to interpreting the Convention in their struggle to address the implications of questionable state practices that have the effect of obstructing the recognition of refugee status (note that under the Convention refugee status is declarative, not constitutive).
Persons whose removal would contravene Sweden’s international convention-based obligations and who do not qualify for Convention refugee status or subsidiary protection status can be granted an initial temporary permit of thirteen months which can be prolonged for two years if the grounds persist.
The UK requires that a Convention refugee in Sweden must apply for a visa in such a case.
The Court of Appeal answered the certified question put to it as follows:In order to be found to be a Convention refugee, a stateless person must show that, on a balance of probabilities he or she would suffer persecution in any country of former habitual residence, and that he or she cannot return to any of his or her other countries of former habitual residence.
Including humanitarian cases as well as Convention refugee status, Canada admits about 58 per cent of refugee claimants compared to 52 per cent for the U.S.
There are problems associated with this exercise in ‘normality’, such as, the logic underpinning the CEAS (which is based on mutual trust and freedom of movement between the Member States) and the resulting ‘vanishing’, at least in Europe, of the 1951 Convention refugee.
He may, however, be in a country that is not bound by either of these instruments, or he may be excluded from recognition as a Convention refugee by the application of the dateline or the geographic 2 See paragraphs 35 and 36 below.
Instead it adopted as a test what it termed “any country plus the Ward factor” as being consistent with the language of the Convention refugee definition and the teachings of the Supreme Court of Canada in Ward.
At first sight, this would suggest a European refugee identity that is restrictive and in some aspects non-‐ compliant with the 1951 Convention refugee.
With respect to the meaning of the terms “unable”, “unwilling” and “protection”, the Supreme Court of Canada adopts an interpretation of the Convention refugee definition that is consistent with paragraphs 98, 99 and 100 of the UNHCR Handbook.