International Journal of Asia-Pacific Studies
Volume 11, Issue 2, 2015, Pages 41-59

Neither compatriots nor refugees: Status discrimination of exiled tibetans and the contradictory faces of the Republic of China (Taiwan) (Article)

Pan M.-L.*
  • a National Chiao Tung University (NCTU), Hsin Chu, Taiwan

Abstract

This article focuses on the double liminality that exiled Tibetans face in Taiwan today. In the context of the international political system, refugees or stateless people cannot be placed into any existing order of nation-states. Refugees are in a state of liminality. With its national title "Republic of China" (ROC), Taiwan has been placed in an ambiguous position with its status as neither a nation state nor a nation state ever since the ROC was expelled from the United Nations. The ROC is in a state of liminality among states in the international order. In addition, Taiwan claims its sovereignty over Tibet, despite losing this sovereignty in 1949 to the communists. Taiwan's ambiguity of identity pushes the government neither to treat Tibetan refugees in Taiwan as compatriots nor accept their status as refugees. Placed under double liminal status, exiled Tibetan refugees in Taiwan have been discriminated against and denied their entitled human rights. This paper provides two cases to reveal the very real difficulty of their situation in Taiwan. Both stories present the kind of dilemma the exiled Tibetans face in Taiwan due to this double liminality. © Penerbit Universiti Sains Malaysia, 2015.

Author Keywords

Stateless Taiwan liminality Republic of China Exiled Tibetans Refugee

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84938064446&partnerID=40&md5=714c30b7f11749372aaed17f901c0786

ISSN: 18236243
Original Language: English