Comparative Law Researches

Comparative Law Researches

The Applicable Law on Personal Status of Refugees: A Comparative Analysis of Iranian Law and the 1951 Refugee Convention

Document Type : Original Research

Authors
1 Assistant Professor, Department of Law, Faculty of Administrative Sciences and Economics, Arak University, Arak, Iran
2 Assistant Professor, Department of Law, Faculty of Literature and Humanities, Shahrekord University, Shahrekord, Iran
3 Assistant Professor, Department of Law, Faculty of Law, Islamic Azad University Isfahan (Khorasgan), Isfahan, Iran
Abstract
Private international lawyers can no longer believe that asylum rules belong only to public international law, or that asylum is not the core of private international law. On the contrary, private international law should be the first branch of law to address asylum and its impact on the personal status of individuals. Cross-border flight by people who fear for their lives or freedom raises important issues in the field of their private international law. In addition to the logistical issues related to asylum seekers, destination countries also face issues related to their private international law in the field of personal status. This article examines one of the long-term legal concerns, namely the portability of the personal status of refugees across borders.

Article 12 of the Convention on the Status of Refugees makes their personal status subject to the law of their country of residence. Considering Iran's accession to this Convention, the rule of Article 7 of the Civil Code will not apply to them, and the law governing the personal status of refugees must be determined differently from that of other foreign nationals.

The findings of this research show that according to Iranian private international law, the governing law for the personal status of refugees residing in Iran should be determined with due regard to their religion or faith. If, according to Article 12 of the Convention, we consider Iranian law to be the governing law of residence, it can be said that the religious rules of minorities recognized in the Constitution, as part of Iranian law, can also be applied to refugees. It is obvious that where the refugee is not a member of Iran's recognized minorities, his personal status will be subject to the law of his residence.
Keywords

Subjects


منابع
الف) کتاب
1- ارحامی، آسیه. (1393). بررسی سیاستهای تقنینی و اجرایی ج.ا.ا در خصوص کودکان پناهنده، گزارش مرکز پژوهش‌های مجلس.
2- ارفع‌نیا، بهشید. (1379). حقوق بین‌الملل خصوصی، ج 2، تهران: بهتاب، چاپ 3.
3- جعفری، رؤیا. (1396). وضعیت حقوقی پناهندگان در حقوق بین‌الملل، تهران: جنگل، چاپ اول.
4- سلجوقی، محمود. (1393). حقوق بین‌الملل خصوصی، ج2، تهران: میزان، چاپ 7.
5- شریعت باقری، محمدجواد. (1396). حقوق بین الملل خصوصی، تهران: میزان، چاپ 2.
6- ضیایی بیگدلی، محمدرضا. (1381). حقوق بین الملل عمومی، تهران: گنج دانش، چاپ 17.
7- فاضل لنکرانی، محمدجواد. (1391). قاعده الزام، قم: مرکز فقهی ائمه اطهار، چاپ اول.
8- الماسی، نجادعلی. (1382). تعارض قوانین، تهران: مرکز نشر دانشگاهی، چاپ 10.
9- کیهانلو، فاطمه. (1390). پناهندگی: نظریه‌ها و رویه‌ها، تهران: انتشارات جنگل، چاپ اول.
10- مدنی، جلال‌الدین. (1387) حقوق بین‌الملل خصوصی، تهران: انتشارات پایدار، چاپ پنجم.
11- نصیری، محمد. (1383). حقوق بین‌الملل خصوصی، تهران: آگاه، چاپ 11.
12- هاشمی شاهرودی، محمود. (1395). فرهنگ فقه مطابق مذهب اهل بیت علیهم السلام، قم: موسسه دائره المعارف فقه اسلامی بر مذهب اهل بیت (ع).
ب) مقاله
13- پروین، فرهاد. (1377). «نگاهی دیگر به قانون حاکم بر احوال شخصیه خارجیان مقیم ایران»، مجله حقوقی بین‌المللی، 17(24): 241-275.
14- ضیاالدین، بتول. (1392). «بررسی اجمالی قاعده الزام»، مطالعات فقه اسلامی و مبانی حقوق، 7 (28): 100-73
15- مصفا، نسرین و حورا هاشمی (1395). «حمایت حقوقی از پناهجویان تغییرات اقلیمی»، فصلنامۀ مطالعات بین‌‌المللی، 13 (1): 40-1.
A) Books
16- Bogdan, M. (2006). “Refugees in Swedish Private International Law”, in: Human Rights Law: From Dissemination to Application Essays in Honour of Göran Melander, Brill/Nijhoff.
17- Foster, M., Lambert, H. (2019). International Refugee Law and the Protection of Stateless Persons, Oxford University Press.
18- Grahl-Madsen, A. (1966). The Status of Refugees in International Law: Refugee Character, A. W. Sijthoff Pub
19- Metzger, A. (2011). “Article 12 (Personal Status)”, in: The 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and Its 1967 Protocol: A Commentary, (Editors: Andreas Zimmermann, Felix Machts, Jonas Dörschner), OUP Oxford.
20- Plender, R. (1998). International Migration Law, Springer.
21- Shin, Mya Saw., et al. (1998). Law of Refugees in Selected Countries, Washington, D.C., Law Library of Congress.
22- Weis, P. (1990). The Refugee Convention, 1951: The Travaux Preparatoires Analysed With A Commentary. At: https://www.refworld.org/reference/research/unhcr/1990/en/100962
B) Articles
23- Chhangani, R.C. (2011). “Refugee Definition and the Law in Nigeria”, Journal of the Indian Law Institute, 53 (1), 32-71.
24- Dikovska, I. (2024). “Personal Status of War-Related Migrants. What Is Relevant to Determine the Applicable Law?” Access to Justice in Eastern Europe, 7(1).
25- Fontaine, Pierre-Michel. (1996). “The Relevance of the 1951 Geneva Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees”, Australian International Law Journal, Vol. 69.
26- Lister, M. (2013). “Who Are Refugees?” Law and Philosophy, 32 (5), 645-671.
27- Robinson, N. (1997). “Convention relating to the Status of Stateless Persons. Its History and Interpretation”, Institute of Jewish Affairs, World Jewish Congress (1955). Available At: https://www.refworld.org/reference/research/unhcr/1997/en/52815
28- Shacknove, A.E. (1985). “Who Is a Refugee?” Ethics, 95 (2), 274-284.
29- Verhellen, J. (2018). “Cross-Border Portability of Refugees’ Personal Status”, Journal of Refugee Studies, 31 (4), 427-443.
30- Walker, K. (2003). “Defending the 1951 convention definition of refugee”, Georgetown Immigration Law Journal, Vol. 17.