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Repatriation

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. It also applies to diplomatic envoys, international officials as well as expatriates and migrants in time of international crisis. For refugees, asylum seekers and illegal migrants, repatriation can mean either voluntary return or deportation.

Haitian migrants are escorted off the Coast Guard Cutter Tampa's fantail to an awaiting Haitian Coast Guard vessel during repatriation.
The crew of USS Pueblo as it arrives at the U.N. Advance Camp, Korean Demilitarized Zone, on 23 December 1968, following their release by the North Korean government

Repatriation of humans edit

Overview and clarification of terms edit

Voluntary vs. forced return edit

Voluntary return is the return of eligible persons, such as refugees, to their country of origin or citizenship based on freely expressed willingness to such return. Voluntary return, unlike expulsion and deportation, which are actions of sovereign states, is defined as a personal right under specific conditions described in various international instruments, such as the OAU Convention, along with customary international law.

 
The U.S. government returns two 11th century stone lintels to Thailand, marking the end of a four-year effort on behalf of the Thailand to bring these items home.

Certain countries offer financial support to refugees and immigrants to facilitate the process of starting a new life in their country of origin. Examples of 21st-century voluntary return include the Danish government, which in 2009 began offering £12,000 each to immigrants to return,[1] Switzerland offering approximately 6,500 Francs, targeted for business startups upon returning home,[2] as well as Ireland.[3] In 2016, Germany allocated €150 million over three years for migrants willing to return,[4] and the Swedish government began offering £3,500 each.[5] 544 Nigerians returned home from Switzerland in 2013.[6] This financial support may also be considered as residency buyouts.

Two countries may have a re-admission agreement, which establishes procedures, on a reciprocal basis, for one state to return irregular non-nationals to their country of origin or a country through which they have transited.[7] Illegal immigrants are frequently repatriated as a matter of government policy. Repatriation measures of voluntary return, with financial assistance, as well as measures of deportation are used in many countries.

As repatriation can be voluntary or forced, the term is also used as a euphemism for deportation. Involuntary or forced repatriation is the return of refugees, prisoners of war, or civil detainees to their country of origin under circumstances that leave no other viable alternatives. According to modern international law, prisoners of war, civil detainees, or refugees refusing repatriation, particularly if motivated by fears of political persecution in their own country, should be protected from refoulement and given, if possible, temporary or permanent asylum.[7] The forced return of people to countries where they would face persecution is more specifically known as refoulement, which is against international law.

Repatriation vs. return edit

While repatriation necessarily brings an individual to his or her territory of origin or citizenship, a return potentially includes bringing the person back to the point of departure. This could be to a third country, including a country of transit, which is a country the person has traveled through to get to the country of destination. A return could also be within the territorial boundaries of a country, as in the case of returning internally displaced persons and demobilized combatants. The distinction between repatriation and return, voluntary or involuntary, is not always clear.[8]

Types of human repatriation edit

Medical repatriation edit

Repatriation is linked with health care due to the costs and resources associated with providing medical treatment to travelers and immigrants pursuing citizenship. For example, if a foreign national is in the United States with a visa and becomes ill, the insurance that the visa holder has in his or her native country may not apply in the United States, especially if it is a country with universal health care coverage. This scenario forces hospitals to choose one of three options:

  • Limit their services to emergency care only (as per the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act)
  • Offer charity care free of charge or at a reduced rate
  • Repatriate the patient back to his or her native country where he or she will be covered according to that country's policy[9]

Determining which option is the most ethical is often very challenging for hospital administrators.

In some cases, a traveler's personal insurance company may repatriate the patient back to their home country for medical treatment due to the cost of medical expenses in the current country. The method of repatriation could be via regular flight, by ground, or by air ambulance which ever is deemed necessary subjected to the medical condition of patient and cost in mind. Medical repatriation is different from the act of medical evacuation.

Repatriation of mortal remains edit

In modern society where everything has become interconnected, it is not uncommon for diasporas to be found living abroad. When someone passes away overseas, a next of kin usually has to physically fly over to verify the body before the body gets repatriated back home by a funeral home.[10]

Repatriation of foreign nationals abroad during wars edit

Countries have repatriated their nationals who are abroad during the outbreak of a war. For example when World War II begun in 1939, the United States launched a repatriation effort to repatriate Americans who were either living or visiting Europe with 75,000 Americans being repatriated by early November 1939.[11]

Post–World War II edit

In the 20th century, following all European wars, several repatriation commissions were created to supervise the return of war refugees, displaced persons, and prisoners of war to their country of origin. Repatriation hospitals were established in some countries to care for the ongoing medical and health requirements of returned military personnel. In the Soviet Union, the refugees seen as traitors for surrendering were often killed or sent to Siberian concentration camps.[12]

Issues surrounding repatriation have been some of the most heatedly debated political topics of the 20th and 21st centuries. Many forced back to the Soviet Union by Allied forces in World War II still hold this forced migration against the United States of America and the United Kingdom.

The term repatriation was often used by Communist governments to describe the large-scale state-sponsored ethnic cleansing actions and expulsion of national groups. Poles born in territories that were annexed by the Soviet Union, although deported to the State of Poland, were settled in the annexed former German territories (referred to in Polish as the Regained Territories). In the process they were told that they had returned to their Motherland.

Battlefield casualties edit

The Korean War marked the first time that the United States or any nation began returning the bodies of battlefield casualties as soon as possible.[13] During Operation Glory, which followed the Korean Armistice Agreement, thousands of remains were exchanged by both sides.[13][14] The practice of immediately recovering casualties continued for United States during the Vietnam War.[13]

Repatriation laws edit

Repatriation laws give non-citizen foreigners who are part of the titular majority group the opportunity to immigrate and receive citizenship. Repatriation of their titular diaspora is practiced by most ethnic nation states. Repatriation laws have been created in many countries to enable diasporas to immigrate ("return") to their "kin-state". This is sometimes known as the exercise of the right of return. Repatriation laws give members of the diaspora the right to immigrate to their kin-state and they serve to maintain close ties between the state and its diaspora and gives preferential treatment to diaspora immigrants.

Most countries in central and eastern Europe as well as Armenia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, the Philippines, Spain, South Korea, Taiwan, and Turkey have longstanding repatriation legislation.[15] China, Japan, Norway and Serbia also have repatriation laws for their diaspora populations. The number of countries with repatriation laws has mushroomed since the end of Soviet communism and most independent nations that were once part of the communist domain in Europe have since legislated repatriation laws. Many other countries such as Jordan and Sweden have (or have had) generous immigration policies with regard to the nation's diaspora without having formally enacted repatriation laws. Such states can be described as practicing common law repatriation.

In comparison, one of the central tenets of the Rastafari movement is the desirability of the repatriation of black people from the Americas and elsewhere back to Africa. While Ethiopia specifically has land available in Shashamane to encourage this project, black people who are citizens of countries outside Africa do not have the right of return to Africa, although as individuals they are free to try to emigrate.

Psychological aspects edit

Repatriation is often the "forgotten" phase of the expatriation cycle; the emphasis for support is mostly on the actual period abroad.[citation needed] However, many repatriates report experiencing difficulties on return: one is no longer special, practical problems arise, new knowledge gained is no longer useful, etc. These difficulties are highly influenced by a number of factors including self-management, spouse's adjustment, time spent abroad and skill utilisation. What is crucial is that every individual perceives these factors in a different way. Reintegration is a process of re-inclusion or re-incorporation of a person into a group or a process, and may contribute to overcoming repatriation.[7]

Direct managers and HR staff often notice the difficulties a repatriate experiences, but they are not always able to act on it. Budget shortcomings and time constraints are frequently cited as reasons why it fails to be an agenda priority. Solutions for repatriation difficulties do not have to be expensive and can lead to great benefits for the company.[citation needed] Basic support can consist, for example, of good communication in advance, during and after the international assignment, or a mentor program to assist the repatriate. The expatriate and his/her family should feel understood by his or her company. Support can increase job satisfaction, thereby protecting the investment made by the company.[16]

Repatriation of non-human entities edit

Human remains edit

Return of human remains to their nation of origin. In the United States, Native Americans' human remains are uncovered and removed from their burial sites in the construction/land development process or as part of archaeological excavations.[17] The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) of 1990 established the process whereby federally recognized Indian tribes and Native Hawaiian organizations can request that federal agencies and institutions receiving federal funds return culturally affiliated human remains. The NAGPRA also sets forth provisions that allow for the disposition of Native American human remains found on federal lands to the affiliated Indian tribe or Native Hawaiian organization. NAGPRA does not apply to the Smithsonian Institution, which is covered under the repatriation provisions of the National Museum of the American Indian Act (NMAI Act) of 1989. In previous eras, it was common for British colonial authorities to collect heads and other body parts of indigenous peoples such as Indigenous Australians and Māori for display in British museums. The repatriation of these body parts is currently ongoing. For an example of a successful body part repatriation, see Yagan. Another example can be seen through the dedicated work of the Karanga Aotearoa Repatriation Programme, established in partnership between Māori and the New Zealand government in 2003. This programme is administered by the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa (Te Papa), and since 2003 has repatriated over 350 Māori and Moriori ancestral remains to Aotearoa New Zealand. Article 12 of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples affirms that indigenous peoples have the right to repatriate their human remains. The declaration was passed in September 2007 with the support of 143 countries. The four opposing countries—Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the United States—subsequently endorsed the declaration.

This also applies to the return of mummified human remains. An example of this kind of repatriation would be the Coffin of Nedjemankh being returned to Egypt after its illegal purchase by the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Cultural artifacts edit

 
Iroquois Wampum belt that belonged to Algonquin Mohawk Chief, currently housed within the Hall of the North American Indian exhibit at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University.[18]

Cultural or art repatriation is the return of cultural objects or works of art to their country of origin (usually referring to ancient art), or (for looted material) its former owners (or their heirs). Repatriation of cultural artifacts also includes items that fall under the purview of NAGPRA and the NMAI Act such as Native American sacred items, funerary objects, and items of cultural patrimony.[19][20] The Iroquois Wampum belts are an example of objects of cultural patrimony subject to repatriation under NAGPRA.[21] The "Utimut Process" of returning cultural objects from Denmark to Greenland between 1982 and 2001, was an early example of repatriation.[22] The no:Bååstede project saw the transfer of over 1600 cultural objects from museums in Oslo to institutions under Sámi management between 2012 and 2019.[23][24]

Economic repatriation edit

Economic repatriation refers to the process of a company getting its profits back into their own country. There are four main methods of repatriation: Dividends and Profits, Royalties, Management Service Fees and Intercompany Loans.[25]

Repatriation of currency edit

Repatriation of currency is when foreign currency is converted back to the currency of the home country. An example would be an American converting British pounds back to U.S. dollars. Repatriation also refers to the payment of a dividend by a foreign corporation to a U.S. corporation. This happens often where the foreign corporation is considered a "controlled foreign corporation" (CFC), which means that more than 50% of the foreign corporation is owned by U.S. shareholders. Generally, foreign direct investment in CFC's are not taxed until a dividend is paid to the controlling U.S. parent company, and is thus repatriated. The foreign direct investment income of the CFC is taxed only by the country where it is incorporated until repatriation. At that time, income is subject to the (typically higher) U.S. tax rate minus the Foreign Tax Credits. (FN: See IRC 951-965) There are currently hundreds of billions of dollars of Foreign direct investment in CFC's because of the disincentive to repatriate those earnings. (See Bureau of Economic Analysis, National Economic Accounts, Integrated Macroeconomic Accounts for the United States, available at the Bureau of Economic Analysis.)[26]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Denmark offers immigrants £12,000 to return home", The Telegraph. November 10, 2009. Retrieved 9 feb 2017
  2. ^ "Switzerland and Nigerians Abroad", Temple Chima Ubochi. Nigeria World. November 28, 2009. Retrieved 9 feb 2017
  3. ^ "Irish government to pay immigrants to go home", Henry McDonald. The Guardian. November 14, 2009. Retrieved 9 feb 2017
  4. ^ "Germany to pay for migrants to go home", Cynthia Kroet. Politico EU. December 9, 2016. Retrieved 9 feb 2017
  5. ^ "Thousands of migrants paid by Swedish gov't to leave", Michael F. Haverluck. One News Now. August 29, 2016. Retrieved 9 feb 2017
  6. ^ "A fresh start in Nigeria, brought to you by Switzerland", Veronica DeVore. Swiss Info. June 6, 2014. Retrieved 9 Feb 2017
  7. ^ a b c Perruchoud, Richard and Jillyanne Redpath-Cross (eds.), Glossary on Migration, Second Edition, International Organisation for Migration, International Migration Law, No. 25, Geneva, 2011.
  8. ^ Brachet, Julien (2016). "Policing the Desert: The IOM in Libya Beyond War and Peace". Antipode. 48 (2): 272–292. Bibcode:2016Antip..48..272B. doi:10.1111/anti.12176.
  9. ^ Wack, Kevin J.; Toby Schonfeld (2012). "Patient Autonomy and the Unfortunate Choice between Repatriation and Suboptimal Treatment". American Journal of Bioethics. 12 (9): 6–7. doi:10.1080/15265161.2012.692444. PMID 22881843. S2CID 24932647.
  10. ^ "Singapore Repatriation Services". Harmony Funeral Care. Retrieved 2023-09-16.
  11. ^ Wilk, Gavin (2021). "Hasty Departures: The Evacuation of American Citizens from Europe at the Outbreak of World War II". Journal of Transnational American Studies. 12 (1). doi:10.5070/T812139136 – via eScholarship.
  12. ^ Fields, Paul. "Ostarbeiters". Coffee Lounge. Retrieved January 11, 2015.
  13. ^ a b c Sledge, Michael (2005-04-26) [First published 2005]. Soldier Dead: How We Recover, Identify, Bury, and Honor Our Military Fallen. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 78–80. ISBN 9780231509374. OCLC 60527603.
  14. ^ Not all remains from the Korean War were returned to the home countries. Some 2,300 casualties are buried at the United Nations Memorial Cemetery in Busan, South Korea.
  15. ^ Yakobson, Alexander; Rubinstein, Amnon. (PDF). ajc.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-11-26.
  16. ^ Ripmeester, N. “Handle with care”, Graduate Recruiter, Issue 22 (February) 2005
  17. ^ Mithlo, Nancy Marie (2004). ""Red-Man's Burden": The Politics of Inclusion in Museum Settings". American Indian Quarterly. 28(3&4) (3): 743–763. doi:10.1353/aiq.2004.0105. S2CID 153889808.
  18. ^ "Wampum belt". collections.peabody.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2021-12-09.
  19. ^ "Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov. Retrieved 2021-12-09.
  20. ^ "Repatriation | National Museum of the American Indian". americanindian.si.edu. Retrieved 2021-12-09.
  21. ^ "NPS Archeology Program: The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA)". www.nps.gov. Retrieved 2021-12-09.
  22. ^ Mille Gabriel & Jens Dahl, (eds.) Utimut : past heritage – future partnerships, discussions on repatriation in the 21st Century, Copenhagen : International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs and Greenland National Museum & Archives, (2008)
  23. ^ Káren Elle Gaup, Inger Jensen and Leif Pareli (Eds.), Bååstede: The Return of Sámi Cultural Heritage (2021)
  24. ^ Sámi museums in Norway, Repatriation of ceremonial objects and human remains: Statement of the Sámi museums in Norway (2020)
  25. ^ "Methods of Repatriation" (PDF). Radius: Global Growth Experts. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  26. ^ "U.S. Department of Commerce. Bureau of Economic Analysis". bea.gov.

Further reading edit

  • Bell-Fialkoff, Andrew. Ethnic Cleansing (1996).
  • Bessel, Richard et al. (ed.) Removing Peoples: Forced removal in the modern world (Oxford UP, 2009).
  • Carmichael, Cathie. Ethnic Cleansing in the Balkans: Nationalism and the Destruction of Tradition (2002).
  • Caroli, Betty Boyd. Italian Repatriation from the United States, 1900-1914 (Center for Migration Studies, 1973) 110 pp.
  • Cinel, Dino. The National Integration of Italian Return Migration, 1870-1929 (Cambridge UP, 1991).
  • Clark, Bruce. Twice a Stranger: How mass expulsion forged modern Greece and Turkey (2007).
  • Crisp, Jeff, and Katy Long. "Safe and voluntary refugee repatriation: from principle to practice." Journal on Migration and Human Security 4.3 (2016): 141-147. online
  • Gilkey, George R. "The United States and Italy: migration and repatriation." Journal of Developing Areas 2.1 (1967): 23-36. online
  • Grams, Grant W. Coming Home to the Third Reich: Return Migration of German Nationals from the United States and Canada, 1933-1941 (McFarland, 2021). online
  • Grams, Grant W. "Deportation from Saskatchewan during the Great Depression, the case of H.P. Janzen", in John D. Thiesen (ed.), Mennonite Life, 2010.
  • Grams, Grant W. "The Deportation of German Nationals from Canada, 1919 to 1939." Journal of International Migration and Integration/Revue de l'integration et de la migration internationale 11 (2010): 219-237. online
  • Long, Katy. The point of no return: Refugees, rights, and repatriation (Oxford UP, 2013) online.
  • Sundhaussen, Holm. "Forced Ethnic Migration" EGO: European History Online 3 Dec. 2010) online

External links edit

  • The Mexican-American repatriation of the early 30s
  • "Greece gets rare Roman coin back". BBC News. 26 June 2006.
  • National NAGPRA Home
  • Karanga Aotearoa Repatriation Programme - Repatriation of Māori and Moriori ancestral remains

repatriation, other, uses, disambiguation, return, thing, person, their, country, origin, respectively, term, refer, human, entities, such, converting, foreign, currency, into, currency, country, well, return, military, personnel, their, place, origin, followi. For other uses see Repatriation disambiguation 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 It also applies to diplomatic envoys international officials as well as expatriates and migrants in time of international crisis For refugees asylum seekers and illegal migrants repatriation can mean either voluntary return or deportation Haitian migrants are escorted off the Coast Guard Cutter Tampa s fantail to an awaiting Haitian Coast Guard vessel during repatriation The crew of USS Pueblo as it arrives at the U N Advance Camp Korean Demilitarized Zone on 23 December 1968 following their release by the North Korean government Contents 1 Repatriation of humans 1 1 Overview and clarification of terms 1 1 1 Voluntary vs forced return 1 1 2 Repatriation vs return 1 2 Types of human repatriation 1 2 1 Medical repatriation 1 2 2 Repatriation of mortal remains 1 2 3 Repatriation of foreign nationals abroad during wars 1 2 4 Post World War II 1 2 5 Battlefield casualties 1 3 Repatriation laws 1 4 Psychological aspects 2 Repatriation of non human entities 2 1 Human remains 2 2 Cultural artifacts 2 3 Economic repatriation 2 4 Repatriation of currency 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksRepatriation of humans editMain article Repatriation and reburial of human remains Overview and clarification of terms edit Voluntary vs forced return edit Voluntary return is the return of eligible persons such as refugees to their country of origin or citizenship based on freely expressed willingness to such return Voluntary return unlike expulsion and deportation which are actions of sovereign states is defined as a personal right under specific conditions described in various international instruments such as the OAU Convention along with customary international law nbsp The U S government returns two 11th century stone lintels to Thailand marking the end of a four year effort on behalf of the Thailand to bring these items home Certain countries offer financial support to refugees and immigrants to facilitate the process of starting a new life in their country of origin Examples of 21st century voluntary return include the Danish government which in 2009 began offering 12 000 each to immigrants to return 1 Switzerland offering approximately 6 500 Francs targeted for business startups upon returning home 2 as well as Ireland 3 In 2016 Germany allocated 150 million over three years for migrants willing to return 4 and the Swedish government began offering 3 500 each 5 544 Nigerians returned home from Switzerland in 2013 6 This financial support may also be considered as residency buyouts Two countries may have a re admission agreement which establishes procedures on a reciprocal basis for one state to return irregular non nationals to their country of origin or a country through which they have transited 7 Illegal immigrants are frequently repatriated as a matter of government policy Repatriation measures of voluntary return with financial assistance as well as measures of deportation are used in many countries As repatriation can be voluntary or forced the term is also used as a euphemism for deportation Involuntary or forced repatriation is the return of refugees prisoners of war or civil detainees to their country of origin under circumstances that leave no other viable alternatives According to modern international law prisoners of war civil detainees or refugees refusing repatriation particularly if motivated by fears of political persecution in their own country should be protected from refoulement and given if possible temporary or permanent asylum 7 The forced return of people to countries where they would face persecution is more specifically known as refoulement which is against international law Repatriation vs return edit While repatriation necessarily brings an individual to his or her territory of origin or citizenship a return potentially includes bringing the person back to the point of departure This could be to a third country including a country of transit which is a country the person has traveled through to get to the country of destination A return could also be within the territorial boundaries of a country as in the case of returning internally displaced persons and demobilized combatants The distinction between repatriation and return voluntary or involuntary is not always clear 8 Types of human repatriation edit Medical repatriation edit Repatriation is linked with health care due to the costs and resources associated with providing medical treatment to travelers and immigrants pursuing citizenship For example if a foreign national is in the United States with a visa and becomes ill the insurance that the visa holder has in his or her native country may not apply in the United States especially if it is a country with universal health care coverage This scenario forces hospitals to choose one of three options Limit their services to emergency care only as per the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act Offer charity care free of charge or at a reduced rate Repatriate the patient back to his or her native country where he or she will be covered according to that country s policy 9 Determining which option is the most ethical is often very challenging for hospital administrators In some cases a traveler s personal insurance company may repatriate the patient back to their home country for medical treatment due to the cost of medical expenses in the current country The method of repatriation could be via regular flight by ground or by air ambulance which ever is deemed necessary subjected to the medical condition of patient and cost in mind Medical repatriation is different from the act of medical evacuation Repatriation of mortal remains edit In modern society where everything has become interconnected it is not uncommon for diasporas to be found living abroad When someone passes away overseas a next of kin usually has to physically fly over to verify the body before the body gets repatriated back home by a funeral home 10 Repatriation of foreign nationals abroad during wars edit Countries have repatriated their nationals who are abroad during the outbreak of a war For example when World War II begun in 1939 the United States launched a repatriation effort to repatriate Americans who were either living or visiting Europe with 75 000 Americans being repatriated by early November 1939 11 Post World War II edit In the 20th century following all European wars several repatriation commissions were created to supervise the return of war refugees displaced persons and prisoners of war to their country of origin Repatriation hospitals were established in some countries to care for the ongoing medical and health requirements of returned military personnel In the Soviet Union the refugees seen as traitors for surrendering were often killed or sent to Siberian concentration camps 12 Issues surrounding repatriation have been some of the most heatedly debated political topics of the 20th and 21st centuries Many forced back to the Soviet Union by Allied forces in World War II still hold this forced migration against the United States of America and the United Kingdom The term repatriation was often used by Communist governments to describe the large scale state sponsored ethnic cleansing actions and expulsion of national groups Poles born in territories that were annexed by the Soviet Union although deported to the State of Poland were settled in the annexed former German territories referred to in Polish as the Regained Territories In the process they were told that they had returned to their Motherland Battlefield casualties edit The Korean War marked the first time that the United States or any nation began returning the bodies of battlefield casualties as soon as possible 13 During Operation Glory which followed the Korean Armistice Agreement thousands of remains were exchanged by both sides 13 14 The practice of immediately recovering casualties continued for United States during the Vietnam War 13 Repatriation laws edit See also Right of Return Repatriation laws give non citizen foreigners who are part of the titular majority group the opportunity to immigrate and receive citizenship Repatriation of their titular diaspora is practiced by most ethnic nation states Repatriation laws have been created in many countries to enable diasporas to immigrate return to their kin state This is sometimes known as the exercise of the right of return Repatriation laws give members of the diaspora the right to immigrate to their kin state and they serve to maintain close ties between the state and its diaspora and gives preferential treatment to diaspora immigrants Most countries in central and eastern Europe as well as Armenia Finland France Germany Greece Ireland Israel Italy Japan Kazakhstan the Philippines Spain South Korea Taiwan and Turkey have longstanding repatriation legislation 15 China Japan Norway and Serbia also have repatriation laws for their diaspora populations The number of countries with repatriation laws has mushroomed since the end of Soviet communism and most independent nations that were once part of the communist domain in Europe have since legislated repatriation laws Many other countries such as Jordan and Sweden have or have had generous immigration policies with regard to the nation s diaspora without having formally enacted repatriation laws Such states can be described as practicing common law repatriation In comparison one of the central tenets of the Rastafari movement is the desirability of the repatriation of black people from the Americas and elsewhere back to Africa While Ethiopia specifically has land available in Shashamane to encourage this project black people who are citizens of countries outside Africa do not have the right of return to Africa although as individuals they are free to try to emigrate Psychological aspects edit Repatriation is often the forgotten phase of the expatriation cycle the emphasis for support is mostly on the actual period abroad citation needed However many repatriates report experiencing difficulties on return one is no longer special practical problems arise new knowledge gained is no longer useful etc These difficulties are highly influenced by a number of factors including self management spouse s adjustment time spent abroad and skill utilisation What is crucial is that every individual perceives these factors in a different way Reintegration is a process of re inclusion or re incorporation of a person into a group or a process and may contribute to overcoming repatriation 7 Direct managers and HR staff often notice the difficulties a repatriate experiences but they are not always able to act on it Budget shortcomings and time constraints are frequently cited as reasons why it fails to be an agenda priority Solutions for repatriation difficulties do not have to be expensive and can lead to great benefits for the company citation needed Basic support can consist for example of good communication in advance during and after the international assignment or a mentor program to assist the repatriate The expatriate and his her family should feel understood by his or her company Support can increase job satisfaction thereby protecting the investment made by the company 16 Repatriation of non human entities editHuman remains edit Return of human remains to their nation of origin In the United States Native Americans human remains are uncovered and removed from their burial sites in the construction land development process or as part of archaeological excavations 17 The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act NAGPRA of 1990 established the process whereby federally recognized Indian tribes and Native Hawaiian organizations can request that federal agencies and institutions receiving federal funds return culturally affiliated human remains The NAGPRA also sets forth provisions that allow for the disposition of Native American human remains found on federal lands to the affiliated Indian tribe or Native Hawaiian organization NAGPRA does not apply to the Smithsonian Institution which is covered under the repatriation provisions of the National Museum of the American Indian Act NMAI Act of 1989 In previous eras it was common for British colonial authorities to collect heads and other body parts of indigenous peoples such as Indigenous Australians and Maori for display in British museums The repatriation of these body parts is currently ongoing For an example of a successful body part repatriation see Yagan Another example can be seen through the dedicated work of the Karanga Aotearoa Repatriation Programme established in partnership between Maori and the New Zealand government in 2003 This programme is administered by the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa Te Papa and since 2003 has repatriated over 350 Maori and Moriori ancestral remains to Aotearoa New Zealand Article 12 of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples affirms that indigenous peoples have the right to repatriate their human remains The declaration was passed in September 2007 with the support of 143 countries The four opposing countries Australia New Zealand Canada and the United States subsequently endorsed the declaration This also applies to the return of mummified human remains An example of this kind of repatriation would be the Coffin of Nedjemankh being returned to Egypt after its illegal purchase by the Metropolitan Museum of Art Cultural artifacts edit Main article Repatriation cultural property nbsp Iroquois Wampum belt that belonged to Algonquin Mohawk Chief currently housed within the Hall of the North American Indian exhibit at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University 18 Cultural or art repatriation is the return of cultural objects or works of art to their country of origin usually referring to ancient art or for looted material its former owners or their heirs Repatriation of cultural artifacts also includes items that fall under the purview of NAGPRA and the NMAI Act such as Native American sacred items funerary objects and items of cultural patrimony 19 20 The Iroquois Wampum belts are an example of objects of cultural patrimony subject to repatriation under NAGPRA 21 The Utimut Process of returning cultural objects from Denmark to Greenland between 1982 and 2001 was an early example of repatriation 22 The no Baastede project saw the transfer of over 1600 cultural objects from museums in Oslo to institutions under Sami management between 2012 and 2019 23 24 Economic repatriation edit Economic repatriation refers to the process of a company getting its profits back into their own country There are four main methods of repatriation Dividends and Profits Royalties Management Service Fees and Intercompany Loans 25 Repatriation of currency edit Repatriation of currency is when foreign currency is converted back to the currency of the home country An example would be an American converting British pounds back to U S dollars Repatriation also refers to the payment of a dividend by a foreign corporation to a U S corporation This happens often where the foreign corporation is considered a controlled foreign corporation CFC which means that more than 50 of the foreign corporation is owned by U S shareholders Generally foreign direct investment in CFC s are not taxed until a dividend is paid to the controlling U S parent company and is thus repatriated The foreign direct investment income of the CFC is taxed only by the country where it is incorporated until repatriation At that time income is subject to the typically higher U S tax rate minus the Foreign Tax Credits FN See IRC 951 965 There are currently hundreds of billions of dollars of Foreign direct investment in CFC s because of the disincentive to repatriate those earnings See Bureau of Economic Analysis National Economic Accounts Integrated Macroeconomic Accounts for the United States available at the Bureau of Economic Analysis 26 See also editBuffer Theory Cambodian American Repatriation Deportation European Convention on the Repatriation of Minors Extraordinary repatriation Forced migration Jus sanguinis Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act NAGPRA of 1990 Population transfer Mexican Repatriation Repatriation in Canada Repatriation of Poles 1955 59 Repatriation of Poles 1944 1946 Repatriation of indentured Indians from Fiji Swedish extradition of Baltic soldiersReferences edit Denmark offers immigrants 12 000 to return home The Telegraph November 10 2009 Retrieved 9 feb 2017 Switzerland and Nigerians Abroad Temple Chima Ubochi Nigeria World November 28 2009 Retrieved 9 feb 2017 Irish government to pay immigrants to go home Henry McDonald The Guardian November 14 2009 Retrieved 9 feb 2017 Germany to pay for migrants to go home Cynthia Kroet Politico EU December 9 2016 Retrieved 9 feb 2017 Thousands of migrants paid by Swedish gov t to leave Michael F Haverluck One News Now August 29 2016 Retrieved 9 feb 2017 A fresh start in Nigeria brought to you by Switzerland Veronica DeVore Swiss Info June 6 2014 Retrieved 9 Feb 2017 a b c Perruchoud Richard and Jillyanne Redpath Cross eds Glossary on Migration Second Edition International Organisation for Migration International Migration Law No 25 Geneva 2011 Brachet Julien 2016 Policing the Desert The IOM in Libya Beyond War and Peace Antipode 48 2 272 292 Bibcode 2016Antip 48 272B doi 10 1111 anti 12176 Wack Kevin J Toby Schonfeld 2012 Patient Autonomy and the Unfortunate Choice between Repatriation and Suboptimal Treatment American Journal of Bioethics 12 9 6 7 doi 10 1080 15265161 2012 692444 PMID 22881843 S2CID 24932647 Singapore Repatriation Services Harmony Funeral Care Retrieved 2023 09 16 Wilk Gavin 2021 Hasty Departures The Evacuation of American Citizens from Europe at the Outbreak of World War II Journal of Transnational American Studies 12 1 doi 10 5070 T812139136 via eScholarship Fields Paul Ostarbeiters Coffee Lounge Retrieved January 11 2015 a b c Sledge Michael 2005 04 26 First published 2005 Soldier Dead How We Recover Identify Bury and Honor Our Military Fallen New York Columbia University Press pp 78 80 ISBN 9780231509374 OCLC 60527603 Not all remains from the Korean War were returned to the home countries Some 2 300 casualties are buried at the United Nations Memorial Cemetery in Busan South Korea Yakobson Alexander Rubinstein Amnon Democratic Norms Diasporas and Israel s Law of Return PDF ajc org Archived from the original PDF on 2010 11 26 Ripmeester N Handle with care Graduate Recruiter Issue 22 February 2005 Mithlo Nancy Marie 2004 Red Man s Burden The Politics of Inclusion in Museum Settings American Indian Quarterly 28 3 amp 4 3 743 763 doi 10 1353 aiq 2004 0105 S2CID 153889808 Wampum belt collections peabody harvard edu Retrieved 2021 12 09 Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act U S National Park Service www nps gov Retrieved 2021 12 09 Repatriation National Museum of the American Indian americanindian si edu Retrieved 2021 12 09 NPS Archeology Program The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act NAGPRA www nps gov Retrieved 2021 12 09 Mille Gabriel amp Jens Dahl eds Utimut past heritage future partnerships discussions on repatriation in the 21st Century Copenhagen International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs and Greenland National Museum amp Archives 2008 Karen Elle Gaup Inger Jensen and Leif Pareli Eds Baastede The Return of Sami Cultural Heritage 2021 Sami museums in Norway Repatriation of ceremonial objects and human remains Statement of the Sami museums in Norway 2020 Methods of Repatriation PDF Radius Global Growth Experts Retrieved 3 September 2020 U S Department of Commerce Bureau of Economic Analysis bea gov Further reading editFurther information Return migration Further reading Bell Fialkoff Andrew Ethnic Cleansing 1996 Bessel Richard et al ed Removing Peoples Forced removal in the modern world Oxford UP 2009 Carmichael Cathie Ethnic Cleansing in the Balkans Nationalism and the Destruction of Tradition 2002 Caroli Betty Boyd Italian Repatriation from the United States 1900 1914 Center for Migration Studies 1973 110 pp Cinel Dino The National Integration of Italian Return Migration 1870 1929 Cambridge UP 1991 Clark Bruce Twice a Stranger How mass expulsion forged modern Greece and Turkey 2007 Crisp Jeff and Katy Long Safe and voluntary refugee repatriation from principle to practice Journal on Migration and Human Security 4 3 2016 141 147 online Gilkey George R The United States and Italy migration and repatriation Journal of Developing Areas 2 1 1967 23 36 online Grams Grant W Coming Home to the Third Reich Return Migration of German Nationals from the United States and Canada 1933 1941 McFarland 2021 online Grams Grant W Deportation from Saskatchewan during the Great Depression the case of H P Janzen in John D Thiesen ed Mennonite Life 2010 Grams Grant W The Deportation of German Nationals from Canada 1919 to 1939 Journal of International Migration and Integration Revue de l integration et de la migration internationale 11 2010 219 237 online Long Katy The point of no return Refugees rights and repatriation Oxford UP 2013 online Sundhaussen Holm Forced Ethnic Migration EGO European History Online 3 Dec 2010 onlineExternal links edit nbsp Look up repatriation in Wiktionary the free dictionary The Mexican American repatriation of the early 30s Greece gets rare Roman coin back BBC News 26 June 2006 National NAGPRA Home Karanga Aotearoa Repatriation Programme Repatriation of Maori and Moriori ancestral remains Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Repatriation amp oldid 1217174747, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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