Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Repatriation is the return of a thing or person to its or their country of origin, respectively. The term may refer to non-human entities, such as converting a foreign currency into the currency of one's own country, as well as the return of military personnel to their place of origin following a war .
The Office of the Refugee Relief and Repatriation Commissioner was established in 1992 when the first wave of Rohingya refugees, about 250 thousand, arrived from Myanmar. The office is located in Cox's Bazar District . [ 4 ]
Voluntary return or voluntary repatriation is the return of an migrant such as illegal immigrants, rejected asylum seekers, refugees, unaccompanied minors, as well as second-generation immigrants [1] who with their own free-will make an autonomous decision to return to their country of origin, or homeland when they are unable or unwilling to ...
A banner advocating "remigration" during an anti-immigration protest in Calais, France, in 2015. Remigration, sometimes euphemized as "repatriation", [1] [2] [3] is a far-right and Identitarian political concept referring to the forced or promoted return of non-ethnically European immigrants, often including their descendants who were born in Europe, back to their place of racial origin ...
The process of repatriation has often been fraught with issues though, resulting in the loss or improper repatriation of cultural heritage. The debate between public interest, Indigenous claims and the wrongs of colonialism is the central tension around the repatriation of Indigenous cultural heritage.
Digital repatriation is the return of cultural heritage items in a digital format to the communities from which they originated. The term originated from within anthropology and typically referred to the creation of digital photographs of ethnographic material, which would then be made available to members of the originating culture. [ 1 ]
Repatriation is the voluntary or involuntary return of travellers and migrants to their place of origin. Repatriation may also refer to: Repatriation (cultural heritage), the return of artifacts to their place of origin Digital repatriation, return in a digital format; Repatriation and reburial of human remains
The Delhi Agreement was a trilateral agreement signed between India, Pakistan and Bangladesh on 28 August 1973; and ratified only by India and Pakistan. [1] It allowed the repatriation of prisoners of war and interned officials held in the three countries after the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War.