The Evolving Psyche of Law in Europe: The Psychology of Human Rights and Asylum Frameworks
Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- Abbreviations and Acronyms -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- 1.1 Europe at a Crossroads: Crisis and Cognitive Dissonance -- 1.2 Law and Psychology in European Legal Discourse -- 1.3 Pertinence of the Topic: Migration and the European Way of Life -- 1.4 A Broader View of Europe and the Law -- 1.5 Hypothesis, Approach, and Originality of Research -- 1.6 Overview of Chapters -- References -- Chapter 2: Rights of Asylum: Overview of International and European Laws Concerning Inclusion and Exclusion -- 2.1 Introduction: Starting with the Law -- 2.2 The Evolving Right to Asylum -- 2.3 Non-Discrimination and Dissonance in International Human Rights Law -- 2.4 Overview of the 1951 Refugee Convention -- 2.4.1 Article 1 Inclusion/Exclusion -- 2.4.2 Gradations of Treatment -- 2.4.3 Article 34: Assimilation, Integration, and Naturalization -- 2.5 Social and Economic Rights of Refugees Under International Law -- 2.5.1 The Right to Employment -- 2.5.1.1 Right to Work in the ICESCR -- 2.5.1.2 Right to Work in Refugee Law: Articles 17-19 -- 2.5.2 Right to an Adequate Standard of Living -- 2.5.2.1 Right to Housing in International Law -- 2.5.2.2 Right to Housing and Social Assistance in Refugee Law: Articles 21 and 23 -- 2.6 Overview of Related European Law -- 2.6.1 The ECHR, ESC, and the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union -- 2.6.2 The EU Qualification Legislation -- 2.6.2.1 Inclusion and Exclusion -- 2.6.2.2 Social and Economic Rights -- 2.6.3 The EU Reception Conditions Directive -- 2.7 Conclusion: Setting the Stage -- References -- Chapter 3: Methodologies and the Conceptual Framework -- 3.1 Introduction: Framing the Critique -- 3.2 Methodologies -- 3.2.1 Interdisciplinary Approaches: Law, Emotion, and Psychology -- 3.2.2 Frame Analysis of Legal Discourse.