<P> Refugees who were resettled to a third country will likely lose the indefinite leave to remain in this country if they return to their country of origin or the country of first asylum . </P> <P> Non-refoulement is the right not to be returned to a place of persecution and is the foundation for international refugee law, as outlined in the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees . The right to non-refoulement is distinct from the right to asylum . To respect the right to asylum, states must not deport genuine refugees . In contrast, the right to non-refoulement allows states to transfer genuine refugees to third party countries with respectable human rights records . The portable procedural model, proposed by political philosopher Andy Lamey, emphasizes the right to non-refoulement by guaranteeing refugees three procedural rights (to a verbal hearing, to legal counsel, and to judicial review of detention decisions) and ensuring those rights in the constitution . This proposal attempts to strike a balance between the interest of national governments and the interests of refugees . </P> <P> Family reunification (which can also be a form of resettlement) is a recognized reason for immigration in many countries . Divided families have the right to be reunited if a family member with permanent right of residency applies for the reunification and can prove the people on the application were a family unit before arrival and wish to live as a family unit since separation . If application is successful this enables the rest of the family to immigrate to that country as well . </P> <P> Those states that signed the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees are obliged to issue travel documents (i.e. "Convention Travel Document") to refugees lawfully residing in their territory . It is a valid travel document in place of a passport, however, it cannot be used to travel to the country of origin, i.e. from where the refugee fled . </P>

Which of the following is an example of refugee