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Stuck in Between Law and Politics? Understanding the Impact of the Right to Housing as a Right of Migrants and Refugees in International Law

Atalay, Serde LU orcid (2026) EVICT: The Impact of the Right to Housing in Times of Crisis
Abstract
Finding and maintaining adequate housing is an increasingly serious struggle for many. To what extent the right to housing in international law offers a way out of this struggle is a crucial question that requires careful thinking. This chapter offers a perspective for answering this question by focusing on a particular group: migrants and refugees. To do so, it examines the dynamics of how the right to housing is shaped and interpreted in international law with a focus on the United Nations system. It argues that three factors impede the potential impact that the right to housing in international law could have on migrants and refugees: 1) the centrality of state consent in agreeing to be bound by treaties, 2) treaties’ selective way of... (More)
Finding and maintaining adequate housing is an increasingly serious struggle for many. To what extent the right to housing in international law offers a way out of this struggle is a crucial question that requires careful thinking. This chapter offers a perspective for answering this question by focusing on a particular group: migrants and refugees. To do so, it examines the dynamics of how the right to housing is shaped and interpreted in international law with a focus on the United Nations system. It argues that three factors impede the potential impact that the right to housing in international law could have on migrants and refugees: 1) the centrality of state consent in agreeing to be bound by treaties, 2) treaties’ selective way of granting rights, and 3) the lax regime of examining states’ compliance with their obligations. By discussing each of these factors through three relevant norms of international law, the chapter argues that looking at a social right such as the right to housing through the migration and asylum lens on the international plane lays bare the tight space between law and politics. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
Finding and maintaining adequate housing is an increasingly serious struggle for many. To what extent the right to housing in international law offers a way out of this struggle is a crucial question that requires careful thinking. This chapter offers a perspective for answering this question by focusing on a particular group: migrants and refugees. To do so, it examines the dynamics of how the right to housing is shaped and interpreted in international law with a focus on the United Nations system. It argues that three factors impede the potential impact that the right to housing in international law could have on migrants and refugees: 1) the centrality of state consent in agreeing to be bound by treaties, 2) treaties’ selective way of... (More)
Finding and maintaining adequate housing is an increasingly serious struggle for many. To what extent the right to housing in international law offers a way out of this struggle is a crucial question that requires careful thinking. This chapter offers a perspective for answering this question by focusing on a particular group: migrants and refugees. To do so, it examines the dynamics of how the right to housing is shaped and interpreted in international law with a focus on the United Nations system. It argues that three factors impede the potential impact that the right to housing in international law could have on migrants and refugees: 1) the centrality of state consent in agreeing to be bound by treaties, 2) treaties’ selective way of granting rights, and 3) the lax regime of examining states’ compliance with their obligations. By discussing each of these factors through three relevant norms of international law, the chapter argues that looking at a social right such as the right to housing through the migration and asylum lens on the international plane lays bare the tight space between law and politics. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
in press
subject
keywords
Impact, Right to housing, Migrants and refugees, State obligations, International law, Politics, Folkrätt
host publication
The Impact of the Right to Housing in Times of Crises
editor
Michel, Vols ; Andrei, Quintiá Pastrana and Emma N., Nic Shuibhne
pages
16 pages
publisher
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd.
conference name
EVICT: The Impact of the Right to Housing in Times of Crisis
conference location
Amsterdam, Netherlands
conference dates
2024-01-25 - 2024-01-26
project
Access to Housing for Migrants and Refugees: Testing the Boundaries of International Law
The Borders Within: the Multifaceted Legal Landscape of Migrant Integration in Europe
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
834ef936-6212-407f-b5b9-a30aa7f1ddfb
date added to LUP
2026-01-04 15:32:20
date last changed
2026-01-07 11:59:37
@inbook{834ef936-6212-407f-b5b9-a30aa7f1ddfb,
  abstract     = {{Finding and maintaining adequate housing is an increasingly serious struggle for many. To what extent the right to housing in international law offers a way out of this struggle is a crucial question that requires careful thinking. This chapter offers a perspective for answering this question by focusing on a particular group: migrants and refugees. To do so, it examines the dynamics of how the right to housing is shaped and interpreted in international law with a focus on the United Nations system. It argues that three factors impede the potential impact that the right to housing in international law could have on migrants and refugees: 1) the centrality of state consent in agreeing to be bound by treaties, 2) treaties’ selective way of granting rights, and 3) the lax regime of examining states’ compliance with their obligations. By discussing each of these factors through three relevant norms of international law, the chapter argues that looking at a social right such as the right to housing through the migration and asylum lens on the international plane lays bare the tight space between law and politics.}},
  author       = {{Atalay, Serde}},
  booktitle    = {{The Impact of the Right to Housing in Times of Crises}},
  editor       = {{Michel, Vols and Andrei, Quintiá Pastrana and Emma N., Nic Shuibhne}},
  keywords     = {{Impact; Right to housing; Migrants and refugees; State obligations; International law; Politics; Folkrätt}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd.}},
  title        = {{Stuck in Between Law and Politics? Understanding the Impact of the Right to Housing as a Right of Migrants and Refugees in International Law}},
  year         = {{2026}},
}