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What does it mean to be a refugee?

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    Around the globe,
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    there are approximately 60 million people
    who have been forced to leave their homes
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    to escape war, violence, and persecution.
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    The majority of them have become
    internally displaced persons,
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    which means they have fled their homes
    but are still within their own countries.
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    Others have crossed a border and sought
    shelter outside of their own countries.
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    They are commonly referred to as refugees.
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    But what exactly does that term mean?
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    The world has known refugees
    for millennia,
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    but the modern definition was drafted
    in the UN's 1951 Convention
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    relating to the status of refugees
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    in response to mass persecutions
    and displacements of the Second World War.
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    It defines a refugee as someone who is
    outside their country of nationality,
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    and is unable to return
    to their home country
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    because of well-founded fears
    of being persecuted.
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    That persecution may be due to their race,
    religion, nationality,
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    membership in a particular social group,
    or political opinion,
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    and is often related to war and violence.
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    Today, roughly half the world's refugees
    are children,
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    some of them unaccompanied by an adult,
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    a situation that makes them especially
    vulnerable to child labor
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    or sexual exploitation.
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    Each refugee's story is different,
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    and many must undergo dangerous
    journeys with uncertain outcomes.
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    But before we get
    to what their journeys involve,
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    let's clear one thing up.
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    There's a lot of confusion regarding
    the difference between the terms
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    "migrant" and "refugee."
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    "Migrants" usually refers to people
    who leave their country
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    for reasons not related to persecution,
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    such as searching
    for better economic opportunities
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    or leaving drought-stricken areas
    in search of better circumstances.
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    There are many people around the world
    who have been displaced
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    because of natural disasters,
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    food insecurities,
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    and other hardships,
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    but international law, rightly or wrongly,
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    only recognizes those fleeing
    conflict and violence as refugees.
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    So what happens when someone
    flees their country?
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    Most refugee journeys
    are long and perilous
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    with limited access to shelter,
    water, or food.
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    Since the departure can be sudden
    and unexpected,
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    belongings might be left behind,
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    and people who are evading conflict
    often do not have the required documents,
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    like visas, to board airplanes
    and legally enter other countries.
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    Financial and political factors can also
    prevent them from traveling
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    by standard routes.
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    This means they can usually only travel
    by land or sea,
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    and may need to entrust their lives
    to smugglers
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    to help them cross borders.
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    Whereas some people seek safety
    with their families,
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    others attempt passage alone
    and leave their loved ones behind
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    with the hopes of being reunited later.
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    This separation can be traumatic
    and unbearably long.
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    While more than half the world's refugees
    are in cities,
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    sometimes the first stop for a person
    fleeing conflict is a refugee camp,
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    usually run by the United Nations
    Refugee Agency or local governments.
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    Refugee camps are intended
    to be temporary structures,
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    offering short-term shelter until
    inhabitants can safely return home,
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    be integrated to the host country,
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    or resettle in another country.
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    But resettlement and long-term
    integration options are often limited.
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    So many refugees are left with no choice
    but to remain in camps for years
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    and sometimes even decades.
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    Once in a new country, the first legal
    step for a displaced person
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    is to apply for asylum.
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    At this point, they are an asylum seeker
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    and not officially recognized as a refugee
    until the application has been accepted.
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    While countries by and large agree
    on one definition of refugee,
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    every host country is responsible
    for examining all requests for asylum
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    and deciding whether applicants can be
    granted the status of refugee.
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    Different countries guidelines
    can vary substantially.
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    Host countries have several duties
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    towards people they have
    recognized as refugees,
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    like the guarantee of a minimum standard
    of treatment and non-discrimination.
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    The most basic obligation towards refugees
    is non-refoulement,
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    a principle preventing a nation from
    sending an individual
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    to a country where their life and freedom
    are threatened.
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    In reality, however, refugees are
    frequently the victims
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    of inconsistent
    and discriminatory treatment.
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    They're increasingly obliged to rebuild
    their lives in the face of xenophobia
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    and racism.
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    And all too often, they aren't permitted
    to enter the work force
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    and are fully dependent
    on humanitarian aid.
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    In addition, far too many refugee children
    are out of school
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    due to lack of funding
    for education programs.
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    If you go back in your own family history,
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    chances are you will discover that
    at a certain point,
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    your ancestors were forced
    from their homes,
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    either escaping a war
    or fleeing discrimination and persecution.
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    It would be good of us to remember
    their stories
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    when we hear of refugees
    currently displaced,
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    searching for a new home.
Title:
What does it mean to be a refugee?
Speaker:
Benedetta Berti and Evelien Borgman
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:43
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