<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title>Episciences.org TEI export of societes-plurielles:8409 - Sociétés plurielles, 2021-08-31, Self-expatriation</title></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>CCSD - Episciences</distributor><availability status="restricted"><licence target="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0">Attribution - Pas d’Utilisation Commerciale 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)</licence></availability><date when="2021-08-31"/></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><p>Episciences.org API platform</p></sourceDesc></fileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><listBibl><biblFull><titleStmt><title xml:lang="fr">Les politiques d’asile en Russie : entre migration de retour et rapatriement</title><author role="aut"><persName><forename type="first">Stepan</forename><surname>Vasilenko</surname></persName><email/><affiliation ref="#struct-0"/></author></titleStmt><editionStmt><edition><date type="whenSubmitted">2021-08-31 09:15:20</date><date type="whenProduced">2021-08-31 09:51:01</date><ref type="file" target="http://societes-plurielles.episciences.org/8409/pdf"/></edition><respStmt><resp>contributor</resp><name key="632777"><persName><forename>Inalco</forename><surname>Presses</surname></persName><email>presses-inalco@inalco.fr</email></name></respStmt></editionStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>CCSD</distributor><idno type="id">societes-plurielles:8409</idno><idno type="url">http://societes-plurielles.episciences.org/8409</idno><idno type="ref">societes-plurielles:8409 - Sociétés plurielles, 2021-08-31, Self-expatriation</idno><licence target="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0">Attribution - Pas d’Utilisation Commerciale 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)</licence></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><biblStruct><analytic><title xml:lang="fr">Les politiques d’asile en Russie : entre migration de retour et rapatriement</title><author role="aut"><persName><forename type="first">Stepan</forename><surname>Vasilenko</surname></persName><email/><affiliation ref="#struct-0"/></author></analytic><monogr><idno type="HAL">hal-03323211</idno><idno type="issn">2557-9959</idno><title level="j">Sociétés plurielles</title><imprint><publisher>Presses de l’Inalco</publisher><pubPlace>Paris, France</pubPlace><biblScope unit="volume">Self-expatriation</biblScope><biblScope unit="issue">Articles</biblScope><date type="datePub">2021-08-31T09:51:01+02:00</date></imprint></monogr><idno type="doi">10.46298/societes-plurielles.2021.8409</idno></biblStruct></sourceDesc><profileDesc><langUsage><language ident="fr">French</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="author"><term>Modern Russia</term><term>public policy</term><term>migration policies</term><term>refugees</term><term>asylum‑seekers</term><term>UNHCR</term><term>ethnic minorities</term><term>Citizenship right</term><term>asylum</term><term>return migration</term><term>asile</term><term>migration de retour</term><term>Russie contemporaine</term><term>politique publique</term><term>politiques de migration</term><term>réfugiés</term><term>demandeurs d’asile</term><term>HCR</term><term>minorités ethniques</term><term>droit de citoyenneté</term><term>[SHS.SCIPO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Political science</term><term>[SHS.GEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Geography</term></keywords></textClass><abstract><p>International audience</p></abstract><abstract xml:lang="en"><p>This article aims to highlight the way in which, in the Russian national context, public authorities erase the boundaries between return migration and asylum in order to support the repatriation of former Soviet citizens to Russia. This political phenomenon has its roots in the fall of the USSR when Russia has rapidly become a country of immigration. This resulted in the adoption of the Geneva Convention and the creation of the two socio‑legal categories of refugees in Russia: « forced migrants » and « refugees ».</p></abstract><abstract xml:lang="fr"><p>Cet article vise à mettre en lumière la manière dont, dans le contexte national russe, les autorités publiques effacent les frontières entre la migration de retour et l’asile afin d’apporter le soutien au rapatriement des ex‑citoyens soviétiques en Russie. Ce phénomène politique prend ses racines au moment de la chute de l’URSS, alors que la Russie est rapidement devenue un pays d’immigration. En a résulté l’adoption de la Convention de Genève et la création des deux catégories socio‑juridiques de réfugiés en Russie : « les migrants forcés » et « les réfugiés ».</p></abstract></profileDesc></biblFull></listBibl></body><back><listOrg><org xml:id="struct-0"><idno type="ROR">https://ror.org/01hnrbb29</idno><orgName>Financial University under the Government of the Russian Federation</orgName></org></listOrg></back></text></TEI>