"Infiltrators" or refugees? An analysis of Israel's policy towards African asylum seekers

Main author: Campbell, John
Other authors: Yaron, Hadas
Hashimshony-Yaffe, Nurit
Format: Journal Article           
Online access: Click here to view record


Summary: This article adopts a genealogical approach in examining Israeli immigration policy by focusing on the situation confronting African asylum seekers who have been forced back into Egypt, detained and deported but who have not had their asylum claims properly assessed. Based on immigration policies formulated at the time of Israeli independence, whose principle objective was to secure a Jewish majority state, we argue that Israel’s treatment of African asylum seekers as ‘infiltrators’/economic migrants stems from an insistence on maintaining immigration as a sovereign issue formally isolated from other policy domains. Such an approach is not only in violation of Israel’s commitment to the Refugee Convention, it directly contributes to policies which are ineffective and unduly harsh.
Other authors: Yaron, Hadas, Hashimshony-Yaffe, Nurit
Language: English
Published: Wiley 2013