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The Global Refugee Crisis

How Should We Respond?

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The world is facing the worst humanitarian crisis since the Second World War. Over 300,000 are dead in Syria, and one and half million are either injured or disabled. Four and a half million people are trying to flee the country. And Syria is just one of a growing number of failed or failing states in the Middle East and North Africa. How should developed nations respond to human suffering on this mass scale? Do the prosperous societies of the West, including Canada and the U.S., have a moral imperative to assist as many refugees as they reasonably and responsibly can? Or, is this a time for vigilance and restraint in the face of a wave of mass migration that risks upending the tolerance and openness of the West?

The eighteenth semi-annual Munk Debate, which was held on April 1, 2016, pits former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour and leading historian Simon Schama against leader of the UK Independence Party Nigel Farage and bestselling author Mark Steyn to debate the West's response to the global refugee crisis.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 3, 2017
      In a provocative debate, Arbour, a former UN high commissioner for human rights, and Schama, a historian—both proponents of more open policies with respect to asylum-seekers—clashed with Farage, a former leader of the U.K. Independence Party, and Steyn, a conservative author and human rights activist, on the challenges that the global refugee crisis presents to Western society. This print transcript of the 18th semiannual Munk Debate vividly preserves the charged atmosphere in Roy Thomson Hall in Toronto, where the intensely emotional debate was held on April 1, 2016, and enhances it with pre-debate interviews with the participants. Readers will be captivated by the strong arguments, passionate tone, and numerous examples of the ill-prepared responses of Western countries to the worst humanitarian crisis since WWII. Covering topics such as the responses of Canada, the U.S., and their European allies to the refugee crisis, and how the influx of refugee seekers from Syria affects the security of developed nations, the debate breaks stereotypes and challenges the established perspectives of the refugee crisis.

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  • English

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