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JRS publishes new booklet on advocacy
Brussels, 19 July 2011 – The Jesuit Refugee Service has
issued its latest publication demonstrating how the
organisation is involved in the empowerment of forcibly
displaced persons, assisting them to gain access to the
rights to which they are entitled.
"We wanted to clearly set out what advocacy means in JRS,
how it is an integral part of our mandate rooted in our
proximity to refugees, flowing from our direct
accompaniment and service provision and based on Jesuit
values", said JRS International Advocacy Coordinator,
Amaya Valcárcel.

Bhutanese refugees in Nepal, during the 16 Days of
Activism Against Gender Violence (JRS)
While JRS advocacy draws on the 1951 UN refugee
convention, widely acknowledged to be the cornerstone of
refugee protection, the organisation uses a wider
definition of 'de facto' refugees to guide its advocacy
and service provision, including victims of armed
conflicts, erroneous economic policy or natural
disasters, as well as internally displaced persons (IDPs).
"Advocacy is an integral part of the JRS mission and our
daily activities around the world. Addressing the root
causes of human displacement and striving to change
unjust policies are fundamental to the JRS mandate.
Accompaniment becomes advocacy when an appeal is made by
a JRS staff member, on behalf of a refugee, to an
outside party that can provide help", continued Ms
Valcárcel.
Full of examples
The 36-page booklet addresses all aspects of JRS
advocacy, from day-to-day work in favour of one or more
individuals to longer-term activities seeking to change
policies nationally, regionally and globally, such as
the organisation's participation in campaigns against
the use of landmines and refugee detention.
The booklet gives a breakdown of the most important
issues on which JRS advocacy is focused and provides
concrete examples of concerns and positive outcomes of
this work. The issues include: access to quality
education, food security, detention, protection and
durable solutions, landmines and cluster bombs, sexual-
and gender-based violence and peace and reconciliation.
For a copy of the booklet, click
here
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