Part 1: Introduction
Chapter 1. From Forced Migration to the Forced Separation of Families
Chapter 2. International Human Rights Frameworks in Relation to National Family Reunification Policy and Administrative Practice
Part II: Everyday Insecurities Faced by Transnationally Separated Families
Chapter 3. Recognizing Insecurities of Family Members Abroad: Human Rights Balancing in European and Finnish Case Law
Chapter 4. ‘There is no family here’: Refugees’ Strategies for Family Reunification in São Paulo
Chapter 5. ‘She Died While Missing Us’: Experiences of Family Separation Among African Refugees in Israel
Chapter 6. For the Greater Good: The Economic and Social Impacts of Irregular Migration on Families in Benin City, Nigeria
Chapter 7. ‘Mum, I Sleep Under a Bridge’: Everyday Insecurities of the Families of Rejected Asylum Seekers in Somalia
Part III: Affective Responses and Waiting for Family Reunification
Chapter 8. Mapping Conditions of (In)security for ‘Dreamer Parents’ at the Mexico-US Border
Chapter 9. Gendered Family Dynamics, Waiting and Mobilities Across Borders: Syrian Refugees Navigating Displacement in Jordan
Chapter 10. ‘Doing Family’ as a Separated Household: The Experience of Syrian Refugees in Germany and Lebanon
Chapter 11. Navigating Affective (In)securities: Forced Migration and Transnational Family Relationships
Chapter 12. Forced Migration and Evolving Responses to Queer Identity in the Muslim Family.