Introduction: Human Rights and New Challenges of Protecting Forced MigrantsDavid HollenbachPart I: New Realities of Protection in a Human Rights Framework1. Rethinking the International Refugee Regime in Light of Human Rights and the Global Common Good Susan F. MartinPart II: Normative Responses: Religion, Human Rights, Gender, and Culture 2. Justice for the Displaced: The Challenge of a Christian Understanding Agbonkhianmeghe E. Orobator 3. Human Rights as a Framework for Advocacy on Behalf of the Displaced: The Approach of the Catholic ChurchSilvano Tomasi 4. No Easy Road to Freedom: Engendering and Enculturating Forced MigrationM. Brinton LykesPart III: Protecting Rights at the Border: Denial of Asylum and Systemic Responses 5. Human Rights as a Challenge to National Policies that Exclude Refugees: Two Case Studies from Southeast AsiaFrank Brennan 6. Loving Humanity While Accepting Real People: A Critique and a Cautious Affirmation of the "Political" in U. S. Asylum and Refugee LawDaniel Kanstroom 7. Closed Borders, Human Rights, and Democratic LegitimationArash Abizadeh Part IV: Protection in the Face of Conflict and War 8. The Experience of Displacement by Conflict: The Plight of Iraqi RefugeesMaryanne Loughry 9. The Ethics and Policy of War in Light of DisplacementJ. Bryan Hehir 10. Reinsterting "Never" into "Never Again": Political Innovations and the Responsibility to ProtectThomas G. Weiss Part V: Protection in Response to Economic Need and Environmental Crises 11. Economic and Environmental Displacement: Implications for Durable SolutionsMary M. DeLorey 12. Refugees or Economic Migrants: Catholic Thought on the Moral Roots of the Distinction Christopher Llanos ContributorsIndex