Part 1 highlights new books published in September 2021, while part 2 lists new books published in August 2021 as well as new legal and open access texts
September 2021:
Wenona Giles & Lorrie Miller, eds., Borderless Higher Education for Refugees: Lessons from the Dadaab Refugee Camps, Bloomsbury Publishing, Sept. 2021
Arockiam Kulandai, Camp Life of Sri Lankan Refugees in India, Routledge, Sept. 2021
Annika Lems, Kathrin Oester & Sabine Strasser, eds., Children of the Crisis: Ethnographic Perspectives on Unaccompanied Refugee Youth in and en Route to Europe, Routledge, Sept. 2021
Silas W. Allard, Kristin E. Heyer & Raj Nadella, eds., Christianity and the Law of Migration, Routledge, Sept. 2021
Waed Athamneh & Muhammad Masud, Defiance in Exile: Syrian Refugee Women in Jordan, Univ. of Notre Dame Press, Sept. 2021
Basem Mahmud, Emotions and Belonging in Forced Migration: Syrian Refugees and Asylum Seekers, Routledge, Sept. 2021
Siobhan Brownlie & Rédouane Abouddahab, eds., Figures of the Migrant: The Roles of Literature and the Arts in Representing Migration, Routledge, Sept. 2021
Birgit Bräuchler, ed., Patterns of Im/mobility, Conflict and Identity, Routledge, Sept. 2021
Feyzi Baban, Suzan Ilcan & Kim Rygiel, The Precarious Lives of Syrians: Migration, Citizenship, and Temporary Protection in Turkey, McGill-Queen's Univ. Press, Sept. 2021
Tamsin Bradley & Janet Gruber, Prevention of Violence Against Women and Girls: Mainstreaming in Development Programmes, Routledge, Sept. 2021
Tendayi Bloom & Lindsey N. Kingston, eds., Statelessness, Governance, and the Problem of Citizenship, Manchester Univ. Press, Sept. 2021
Raffael Beier, Amandine Spire & Marie Bridonneau, eds., Urban Resettlements in the Global South: Lived Experiences of Housing and Infrastructure between Displacement and Relocation, Routledge, Sept. 2021
Gemma Houldey, The Vulnerable Humanitarian: Ending Burnout Culture in the Aid Sector, Routledge, Sept. 2021
ActionAid Association, Women Refugee Voices from Asia and Africa: Travelling for Safety, Routledge, Sept. 2021