This document discusses asylum and the treatment of asylum seekers. It defines a refugee according to the 1951 UN Refugee Convention. Australia is legally obligated not to return refugees to countries where they may face persecution. However, in recent decades there has been a criminalization of asylum seekers in policies and media portrayals. The document also discusses the large numbers of displaced people globally, including over 60 million displaced due to conflicts. It notes that most refugees flee to neighboring countries rather than Western nations.
The Muslim world is now a world of conflict and forced migrants (Dar al harb wa al muhajirun). Asylum and “refuge-seeking” are two important themes in Islamic history.
Islamic theory and teachings relating to refugees and forced displacement are known as hijrah law. It is quite different from modern refugee law. It arguably gives more protection to asylum-seekers and refugees (mustaminun). However, hijrah law is rarely referred to or invoked today. If they were taken into consideration, it could contribute greatly to the protection of the forcibly displaced. It might also reduce the numerous problems refugees all over the globe are facing.
The Syrian refugee situation, has become one of the biggest humanitarian crisis’ in the last decade. An estimated 9 million Syrians have fled their homes since the outbreak of civil war in March 2011. We see it on tv. We read about it in the news…but do we understand who and what a refugee is?
The Muslim world is now a world of conflict and forced migrants (Dar al harb wa al muhajirun). Asylum and “refuge-seeking” are two important themes in Islamic history.
Islamic theory and teachings relating to refugees and forced displacement are known as hijrah law. It is quite different from modern refugee law. It arguably gives more protection to asylum-seekers and refugees (mustaminun). However, hijrah law is rarely referred to or invoked today. If they were taken into consideration, it could contribute greatly to the protection of the forcibly displaced. It might also reduce the numerous problems refugees all over the globe are facing.
The Syrian refugee situation, has become one of the biggest humanitarian crisis’ in the last decade. An estimated 9 million Syrians have fled their homes since the outbreak of civil war in March 2011. We see it on tv. We read about it in the news…but do we understand who and what a refugee is?
Refugee and the Law, 2nd edition
Published by Human Rights Law Network(HRLN), a division of Socio Legal Information Centre(SLIC). For more details about our works, visit us at http://hrln.org
Refugees around the world constitute millions of people. Migrant and refugee communities need helping hand from your community to prevent and resolve conflicts, and to help achieve security and peace.
The presentation is concerned with the increasing humanitarian turmoil of present world, refugee crisis. It contains the following contents definition of refugee, causes, issues of refugee emergency, state of international assistance and present scenario of human rights violation happened for refugee crisis
Role of UN and other NGOs in solving Syrian Refugee CrisisNepaliPadam
It was the power point presentation, presented during my second semester master degree at Ajou University, Suwon, South Korea.
I tries to figure out the current critical assessment of Syrian refugee crisis and how the United nation and other NGOs are working to address the refugee crisis.
FMO has adopted the definition of ‘forced migration’ promoted by the International Association for the Study of Forced Migration (IASFM) which describes it as ‘a general term that refers to the movements of refugees and internally displaced people (those displaced by conflicts) as well as people displaced by natural or environmental disasters, chemical or nuclear disasters, famine, or development projects.’ FMO views forced migration as a complex, wide-ranging and pervasive set of phenomena. The study of forced migration is multidisciplinary, international, and multisectoral, incorporating academic, practitioner, agency and local perspectives. FMO focuses on three separate, although sometimes simultaneous and inter-related, types of forced migration. These three types are categorized according to their causal factors: conflict, development policies and projects, and disasters.
Refugee and the Law, 2nd edition
Published by Human Rights Law Network(HRLN), a division of Socio Legal Information Centre(SLIC). For more details about our works, visit us at http://hrln.org
Refugees around the world constitute millions of people. Migrant and refugee communities need helping hand from your community to prevent and resolve conflicts, and to help achieve security and peace.
The presentation is concerned with the increasing humanitarian turmoil of present world, refugee crisis. It contains the following contents definition of refugee, causes, issues of refugee emergency, state of international assistance and present scenario of human rights violation happened for refugee crisis
Role of UN and other NGOs in solving Syrian Refugee CrisisNepaliPadam
It was the power point presentation, presented during my second semester master degree at Ajou University, Suwon, South Korea.
I tries to figure out the current critical assessment of Syrian refugee crisis and how the United nation and other NGOs are working to address the refugee crisis.
FMO has adopted the definition of ‘forced migration’ promoted by the International Association for the Study of Forced Migration (IASFM) which describes it as ‘a general term that refers to the movements of refugees and internally displaced people (those displaced by conflicts) as well as people displaced by natural or environmental disasters, chemical or nuclear disasters, famine, or development projects.’ FMO views forced migration as a complex, wide-ranging and pervasive set of phenomena. The study of forced migration is multidisciplinary, international, and multisectoral, incorporating academic, practitioner, agency and local perspectives. FMO focuses on three separate, although sometimes simultaneous and inter-related, types of forced migration. These three types are categorized according to their causal factors: conflict, development policies and projects, and disasters.
This week we will look at the attempts made to fight against racism. Anti-racism has been a feature of both social movements in civil society, and governmental bodies such as the British Commission for Racial Equality. As such, anti-racism cannot be said to be a unitary phenomenon. The diverse range of discourses, practices and policies under the heading of anti-racism means that we can only talk about it in the plural. Broadly speaking, anti-racism can be seen as divided between those discourses and practices that are more closely allied with a state-based vision, focused on the rule of law and institutionalized measures, and those that, on the contrary, see the state as a source – rather than a solution – to racism. What is the difference between these two approaches and how have they developed. In Britain, what are some of the ways in which anti-racism has taken form, e.g. in the trade union movement, through the intersection with music, from different political standpoints, as ‘anti-fascist’, or as anti-colonialist in inspiration? Looking at anti-racism from the 1960s to the present day, we shall tease out the many guises of anti-racism and ask if it is enough merely to be ‘against’ racism?
This week builds upon last week’s discussion of citizenship and whether everyone is included in so-called liberal democratic societies, such as those of Europe. Everyone (almost!) says they are a democrat but democracy has many different meanings: the popular, direct or participatory democracy of classical Athens, Rousseau, Marx and Lenin; the protective, representative and limited democracy of the Mills and many liberals; and ideas which see democracy as merely a means for revolving governing elites, ensuring efficient government or the means by which governing politicians are made accountable. There are many different ideas of democracy, some of which stress empowerment and others the minimising of, and protection against, power. What sorts of society do these different forms of democracy require for their success? Are some of these forms, or even democracy in general, only appropriate for some sorts of society – (e.g. is democracy specific to the west)? Are the types of democratic systems that we live in today really democracies? Some have argued that representative democracy, where a parliament is elected every number of years, is not as inclusive as a participatory democracy where there is an attempt to include the population in decision making. Still others argue that this is utopian and that it is impossible to run a country if everyone is involved. Moreover, elite theorists argue that this runs contrary to human nature! We will be contrasting representative, elitist and participatory democratic styles and relating these to theories about who governs. Is there a small elite that runs the country, or does everyone have an equal say in a truly pluralist manner?
The Racial State Week 7: From theft to apologyAlana Lentin
The practice of removing Aboriginal children from their families led to an estimated 25,000 children becoming part of the ‘Stolen Generations’. Almost all Aboriginal Australians were directly affected by the Stolen Generations. The issue of the Stolen Generations is a prime example of two competing conceptualisations of race discussed by David Goldberg, in The Racial State, discussed in Week 3 – racial naturalism and racial historicism. Some have claimed that Aboriginal children were taken because it would lead to the destruction of Aboriginality, whereas others have claimed that children were taken benevolently, for their own good. Questions of responsibility, social justice and pain are at the heart of the debate around the Apology for the Stolen Generations enacted by Kevin Rudd in 2008. Does the Apology uncover or further mask the dispossession of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people? What version of Australian national identity does the Apology participate in in an era in which individual rights are prioritised over collective identities? How can a nation-state be ‘sorry’? Can nations have feelings? Through looking at representations of state policies and the discussion on ‘reconciliation’, this week will introduce ideas about emotion, recognition and belonging to the discussion on race and the state.
The concept of citizenship tends to be seen as inclusive. Today, more and more emphasis is placed on education for citizenship and is a major part of the curriculum. However, different theories of citizenship conceive it in different ways. Different tiers of citizenship are created according to the extent to which a person is said to belong. In some states, citizenship is conferred according to birth (jus soli) whereas in others it is a question of inheritance (jus sanguinus). However, even if someone is nominally a full citizen, they can be excluded in different ways, for example, due to their sex, ethnicity, or class status. This week we will examine the concept of citizenship and look at who is included, and who is excluded by it. We will pay particular attention to the ways in which class and socioeconomic deprivation have an effect on the ability to be a full citizen by examining the role of education, the Welfare State, and political participation.
As a special topic, this week will look at the fine line between racism and ‘humour’. British film and television has long been a site for views of the other. Originally, these were represented by white actors and comedians whose interpretations of ethnic minority life were often perceived as insulting and patronising. More recently, British filmmakers, actors and comedians have introduced a new genre to the British cultural sphere, one that takes a playful look at minority ethnic communities from their own perspective. It has been suggested that these representation are non-racist because they come from those potentially affected by racism themselves. In light of the recent furore surrounding the Borat film by Sascha Baron Cohen and other examples, this session asks what counts as humour and what is merely racist. We will be examining this question through the use of clips from different films and television shows as well as classic jokes. We will be relying mainly on clips of various films and TV shows to be shown in the lecture.
The title of this week’s session is taken from the famous study of ‘mugging’ by Stuart Hall et al. in the 1970s in which the authors note the racialised nature of the crime of mugging and the instigation of a public ‘moral panic’ in the association of young black men and violent street crime. Taking this as a starting point, we shall look at the way in which racialised people have been seen as having a natural propensity to crime and deviance that justifies the use of ‘special measures’ against them. We shall pay particularly close attention to the cases of disproportionate incarceration, the ‘prison industrial complex’ and of the suspension of law in the case of the ‘Northern Territory Intervention’.
The talk examined the persistence of race in purportedly postracial times. Why do racial logics continue to underpin disparities in social, economic, cultural and political opportunities despite official commitments to the eradication of racism, not only within individual states but across them? Alana Lentin built on Barnor Hesse’s invocation of a ‘raceocracy’ which rules performatively and as a system for the management of human life. Zoning in on the global laboratory for the ‘production of horror’ that is the Australian system of mandatory detention for asylum seekers, she examined the co-dependency between the maintenance of the racialized border and professed commitments to a postracial future, a division which entrenches a divide between purified inside and the contaminants that lurk outside the contemporary racial state.
This session will look at the politics of knowledge production and discuss the ways in which the establishment of the dominant discourses of legitimate knowledge relied upon the concomitant marginalisation of ‘other’ sources of knowledge. Mainstream approaches to the philosophy of social science have not, for the most part, been particularly concerned with the effects of epistemology on the racialized/ethnicized and/or the non-Western and non-white. This is because the West, as the location from which the majority of these viewpoints have been constructed, has either implemented a universalistic image of the world which proposes that it can be all encompassing, or because it has more directly ignored the world beyond Europe and the West. This session will critically discuss the emergence of ‘postcolonial studies’ and its positioning of the subaltern as the vantage point from which to critique these dominant discourses, as well as attending to the various problems present in such an undertaking, as identified in the writings of Spivak. It will also look at the problems of doing social research with or on ‘Other’ (non-white, non-Western) groups. We shall examine the problems of paternalism, tokenism, objectivism, victimisation and the intended or unintended abuses of power that can arise out of sensitive and highly politicised research situations. We also ask what a philosophy of social science would look like if it was purposefully dedicated to acknowledging the injustices borne of racism and colonialism and redressing them.
This lecture critically analyses postcolonial thinking, decolonial thought and critical border thinking.
Reading
Decolonizing the Social
Core Readings
Rámon Grosfoguel (2008) ‘Transmodernity, border thinking, and global coloniality: Decolonizing political economy and postcolonial studies’, Eurozine.
Chakrabarty, Dipesh (2000) Provincialising Europe: Postcolonial Thought and Historical Difference Princeton University Press Introduction and Chapter One (pp. 3-47). [Library]
Verges, Francoise (2004) 'Postcolonial Challenges', in Nicholas Gane (ed.) The Future of Social Theory. Continuum.
Bhambra, Gurminder K. (2007) 'Multiple Modernities or Global Interconnections: Understanding the global post the colonial', in N. Karagiannis and P. Wagner (eds.), Varieties of World-Making: Beyond Globalization. Liverpool UP.
Hesse, Barnor. 2007. ‘Racialized Modernity: An analytics of white mythologies,’ Ethnic and Racial Studies, Volume 30, Issue 4: pages 643 - 663.
Mignolo, Walter D (2006) 'Citizenship, Knowledge, and the Limits of Humanity'. American Literary History (Cary, NC; Oxford) (18:2): 312-321.
Further Readings
Susan Buck-Morss, 'Hegel and Haiti,' Critical Inquiry 26(4): 821-865.
bell hooks (1990) 'Postmodern blackness', Postmodern Culture 1(1).
Fanon, Frantz (1963) ‘Concerning Violence’, Chapter 1 of The Wretched of the Earth. New York: Grove Press.
Spivak, Gayatri Chakrabarty (1988) ‘Can the Subaltern Speak?’ in Cary Nelson and Lawrence Grossberg Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture University of Illinois Press, Chicago.
On Decolonial thought
Ann E. Reuman and Gloria E. Anzaldúa (2000) ‘Coming into Play: An Interview with Gloria Anzaldúa’, MELUS 25(2): 3-45.
Arturo Escobar (2010) ‘Latin America at a Crossroads’, Cultural Studies 24(1): 1 — 65.
Arturo Escobar (2007) ‘Worlds and Knowledges Otherwise', Cultural Studies 21(2): 179 —210.
Enrique Dussel (2009) ‘“Being-in-the-World-Hispanically”: A World on the “Border” of Many Worlds’, Comparative Literature 61(3): 256-273.
Walter D. Mignolo (2002) ‘The Zapatistas's Theoretical Revolution: Its Historical, Ethical, and Political Consequences’, Review 25(3): 245-275
Walter D. Mignolo (2011) ‘The communal and the decolonial’, Turbulence
For arguments bringing in the colonial relationship to general understandings see:
Appadurai, Arjun (1990) ‘Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Cultural Economy’ Public Culture Vol.2, No. 2, Spring pp1-23.
Said, Edward W. (1993) Culture and Imperialism Chatto and Windus, London.
Dirlik, Arif (1994) ‘The Postcolonial Aura: Third World Criticism in the Age of Global Capitalism’ Critical Inquiry Vol. 20, Winter pp. 328-35
Mohanty, Chandra Talpade (2002) ‘“Under Western Eyes” Revisited: Feminist solidarity through anticapitalist struggles’, Signs 28(2): 499-533.
Bar On, Bat-Ami (1993) ‘Marginality and Epistemic Privilege’
Why the call for French 'context' in the aftermath of the attacks on Charlie Hebdo was steeped in a whiteness that denied the significance of a 'black analytics'.
Countering the racist lies & building solidarity with refugeesRatbag Media
Talk presented by Peter Benedek,
Focus of this is on countering the dangerous, racist lies – from politicians, from media – that create climate of fear, of scapegoating. Just what is behind this “fortress Australia” policy?
As Alex – Tamil spokesperson for the boat currently in Indonesia, where a recent hunger strike was held – told GLW: “When people are fleeing war and genocide, how can a country think protecting themselves is more important than helping these people? The world is for all of humankind, we are just like you except we do not have a country.”
“We are refugees and we want to get away from genocide”, Alex said. “There are women and children on board here. And we are not animals, we are people, but we are being treated inhumanely.”
The issue of asylum is arguably one of the most politicised in Australia and elsewhere. Critics argue for a strict distinction between legal and illegal immigration, while supporters of the right to asylum highlight human rights abuses, war, and starvation as legitimate reasons for benevolence. States over the last two decades have increased the policing of borders, detention and deportation of would-be refugees. We shall examine the various approaches to the debate situating it within a view on globalization that highlights the apparently unstoppable flow of humans and the possible futility of borders in a transnational age defined by risk, uncertainty and the human instinct for survival.
2. Overview
Definitions & legal obligations
Facts & figures
Forced migration / Globalisation
Criminalisation of asylum seekers
The detention industry
Campaigns
3. ref·u·gee
/ˌrefyo͝oˈjē/
!
Any person who owing to a well founded fear of
being persecuted for reasons of race, religion,
nationality, membership of a particular social
group or political opinion, is outside the country
of his/her nationality and is unable, or owing to
such fear, is unwilling to avail himself/herself of
theprotection of that country.
!
United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (1951)
!
!
!
Australia is a signatory to 1951 Convention on Refugees. !
!
An asylum seeker is someone who is waiting to have their claim for refugee status approved. If a person is found to be a genuine refugee, Australia (and all other
signatories) are legally bound to offer protection and to ensure that the!
person is not sent back unwillingly to a country in which they risk being persecuted.!
!
This is called the principle of ‘non-refoulement’.!
!
Background to Geneva Convention:!
!
Written in the context of WW3 aftermath.!
!
Geared towards a European public and never meant to cope with non-European (African, Asian etc.) immigration.!
!
But, sharp rise in ethnic conflict - often fuelled by the West - in the Middle East (Iraq-Iran war, Palestinians…) or in Latin America (Chilean and Argentinian dictatorships…)
or famine and conflict in various African countries - led to increase in people seeking refuge in the West.!
!
Further increased since wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Syrian civil war. Asylum seeking in Australia also fuelled by the tensions in Sri Lanka and the dangers to the Tamil
minority.!
!
!
4. The flight of refugees
around the globe
NewYork Times
New York Time source:
!
Nearly 60 million people are displaced around the world because of conflict
and persecution (UN figures).
About 14 million of those fled in 2014.
!
Despite the drama of migrants trying to cross the Mediterranean to reach Europe, most Africans displaced by conflict stay in Africa.
!
About 15 million people are displaced in sub-Saharan Africa — 4.5 million of them fled last year. Long-lasting conflicts in Somalia, Sudan, and the
Democratic Republic of Congo, as well as the civil war in South Sudan, are some of the top contributors.
!
5. NewYork Times
When refugees flee their own countries, most end up with their
immediate neighbours, often some of the world’s poorer nations.
!
In terms of hosting displaced people, developed countries pale in comparison with nations bordering conflict zones. Combined, the United States and
France had 760,000 refugees last year. Ethiopia, for example, is host to some 665,000, most from Somalia and South Sudan.
6. Asylum and Australia
Asylum Seeker Resource Centre
Australia:
!
Australian figures:
!
Total onshore applications for asylum in 2013: 26,427 (of which boat arrivals 18,119). 48% of plane arrivals and 67% of boat arrivals were granted visas
(meaning that most arrivals are so-called ‘genuine’ refugees.
!
35,000 people lodged offshore refugee visa applications (6,500 granted)
!
[Source - The Refugee Council] https://www.refugeecouncil.org.au/resources/statistics/asylum-seekers/]
!
Current AU commitment:
!
The government plans to grant 6,000 refugee visas in 2014-15 (not including 12,000 crisis refugees for Syrians)
!
Compare with 64,500 in Germany or 83,400 in the US (these are for people granted permanent protection - not people arriving in extraordinary
circumstances such as currently in Europe).
!
7. Why seek
asylum?
Multiple push factor
Why a theory of forced
migration?
1. Multiple push factors:!
!
Changing definition of what pushed people to flee.!
!
Beyond traditional reasons - political persecution, war, famine, etc. These are still the predominant factors particularly during today’s context (Syrian civil war, Iraq,
Afghanistan, Rohingya Muslims…)!
!
- there are also new factors:!
!
Castles mentions: !
!
- Environmental factors/climate refugees - ‘development projects such as dams, airports, roads, luxury housing, conservation areas and game parks.’!
!
Often affect poor or indigenous people more - World Bank says that there are 10,000 environmental refugees (in 2003). But Castles warns against this label - as the
factors are economic and political as well as purely environmental (i.e. people without political power unable to resist, e.g. mining projects).!
!
- Sex trafficking: growing demand in the industrialised north coupled with heavy migration controls fuels the illicit sex industry - underage, unprotected, often unpaid, no
access to sex worker organisations/unions (often affects women from conflict zones and others lured by the hope of a better life).!
!
2. Why a theory of forced migration?!
!
Castles (2003): it is not the numbers alone that make a theory necessary.!
8. Worthy lives,
Wasted lives
Migration seems to have become intensified during globalisation (era since the 1970s defined by the interconnectedness of economic and political structures at a global
level).!
!
Many have pointed out that, under globalisation goods and money flow freely while the movement of people is constrained.!
!
Z. Bauman: to understand globalisation, it is better to see it is a two-way process - for some the world is becoming more global, while for the majority it is becoming more
local.!
!
Glocalization!
!
Zygmunt Bauman argues that globalization can be described as the ‘new world disorder’.!
!
!
While globalization has allowed the rich to make more money more quickly, two-thirds of the world has actually lost out due to globalization.!
!
Those who benefit from globalization live in time rather than space. They are not constrained by their geographical location because their wealth allows them to move
freely.!
!
In contrast, those who lose out are stuck in space. As Bauman puts it, ‘in their time, nothing ever happens’ because they do not have the ability to move as they please. !
!
So globalization and localization should be seen as two sides of the same coin.!
!
9. Criminalising Asylum
Since the late 1990s, it has become commonplace to link asylum seekers with criminality, sponging, and increasingly with terrorism.!
!
Explain racist van image !
!
Criminality: Two aspects !
!
1. Seeking asylum is increasingly portrayed as illegal. In fact it is not illegal to seek asylum whatever the means of transport used to get into a country.!
!
2. Asylum seekers themselves are portrayed as criminals, or potential criminals. This can be seen in calls for communities to be told about asylum seekers living in their
areas (as one would for sex offenders).!
!
In addition to the policy of mandatory detention (to be examined later), the law has become harsher to place asylum seekers living in the community on temporary visas
under suspicion.!
!
e.g. Code of Behaviour:!
!
The Australian Department of Immigration and Border Protection introduced a new Code of Behaviour in December 2014 which will apply to all adult ‘illegal maritime
arrivals’ who are considered for the grant of subclass 050 Bridging E Visa (DIBP, 2014b). !
!
The code was introduced to make sure that people who are granted a bridging visa behave ‘appropriately’ in the Australian community. !
!
The terms of the code explicitly state that, !
10. Criminalising Asylum
‘We consider the border not to be a purely physical barrier
separating nation states, but a complex continuum
stretching offshore and onshore, including the overseas,
maritime, physical border and domestic dimensions of the
border.!
!
Treating the border as a continuum allows an integrated,
layered approach to provide border management in depth
— working ahead of and behind the border, as well as at
the border, to manage threats and take advantage of
opportunities.’!
Border Force Website!
Since the late 1990s, it has become commonplace to link asylum seekers with criminality, sponging, and increasingly with terrorism.!
!
Explain racist van image !
!
Criminality: Two aspects !
!
1. Seeking asylum is increasingly portrayed as illegal. In fact it is not illegal to seek asylum whatever the means of transport used to get into a country.!
!
2. Asylum seekers themselves are portrayed as criminals, or potential criminals. This can be seen in calls for communities to be told about asylum seekers living in their
areas (as one would for sex offenders).!
!
In addition to the policy of mandatory detention (to be examined later), the law has become harsher to place asylum seekers living in the community on temporary visas
under suspicion.!
!
e.g. Code of Behaviour:!
!
The Australian Department of Immigration and Border Protection introduced a new Code of Behaviour in December 2014 which will apply to all adult ‘illegal maritime
arrivals’ who are considered for the grant of subclass 050 Bridging E Visa (DIBP, 2014b). !
!
The code was introduced to make sure that people who are granted a bridging visa behave ‘appropriately’ in the Australian community. !
!
The terms of the code explicitly state that, !
11. Producing illegality
1. In Australia it has become consensus that the general population endorses a tough stance on asylum seekers.!
!
59 per cent of people think most boat arrivals are not genuine refugees according to January 2014 poll.!
!
Similar attitudes in other western countries (although tide may be turning in reaction to recent crisis - but for how long?)!
!
But where do these harsh attitudes come from?!
!
It is undoubted that a combination of the wish of governments to be seen as tough on border protection and national security (the two are often seen as going hand-in-
hand) and the role of the media in portraying asylum seekers as potential criminals and/or terrorists are at fault.!
!
In AU, tough attitudes to asylum seekers go back to the Tampa affair in 2001. A boat carrying 438 refugees from Afghanistan was denied entry to Australia.!
!
Howard: "we decide who comes into this country and the circumstances in which they come.”!
!
Howard’s tough stance won him the election, piggy-backing on 9/11 (which happened one month later), allowing for a conflation of asylum seekers - seen as ‘queue-
jumpers’ trying to enter illegally - with the threat of terrorism (a common trope - even today Syrian refugees are being portrayed as infiltrated by ISIS members). !
!
!
2. Media:!
!
Asylum seekers are often portrayed in the press as freeloaders [click for photo].!
12. Producing illegality
1. In Australia it has become consensus that the general population endorses a tough stance on asylum seekers.!
!
59 per cent of people think most boat arrivals are not genuine refugees according to January 2014 poll.!
!
Similar attitudes in other western countries (although tide may be turning in reaction to recent crisis - but for how long?)!
!
But where do these harsh attitudes come from?!
!
It is undoubted that a combination of the wish of governments to be seen as tough on border protection and national security (the two are often seen as going hand-in-
hand) and the role of the media in portraying asylum seekers as potential criminals and/or terrorists are at fault.!
!
In AU, tough attitudes to asylum seekers go back to the Tampa affair in 2001. A boat carrying 438 refugees from Afghanistan was denied entry to Australia.!
!
Howard: "we decide who comes into this country and the circumstances in which they come.”!
!
Howard’s tough stance won him the election, piggy-backing on 9/11 (which happened one month later), allowing for a conflation of asylum seekers - seen as ‘queue-
jumpers’ trying to enter illegally - with the threat of terrorism (a common trope - even today Syrian refugees are being portrayed as infiltrated by ISIS members). !
!
!
2. Media:!
!
Asylum seekers are often portrayed in the press as freeloaders [click for photo].!
13. Producing illegality
1. In Australia it has become consensus that the general population endorses a tough stance on asylum seekers.!
!
59 per cent of people think most boat arrivals are not genuine refugees according to January 2014 poll.!
!
Similar attitudes in other western countries (although tide may be turning in reaction to recent crisis - but for how long?)!
!
But where do these harsh attitudes come from?!
!
It is undoubted that a combination of the wish of governments to be seen as tough on border protection and national security (the two are often seen as going hand-in-
hand) and the role of the media in portraying asylum seekers as potential criminals and/or terrorists are at fault.!
!
In AU, tough attitudes to asylum seekers go back to the Tampa affair in 2001. A boat carrying 438 refugees from Afghanistan was denied entry to Australia.!
!
Howard: "we decide who comes into this country and the circumstances in which they come.”!
!
Howard’s tough stance won him the election, piggy-backing on 9/11 (which happened one month later), allowing for a conflation of asylum seekers - seen as ‘queue-
jumpers’ trying to enter illegally - with the threat of terrorism (a common trope - even today Syrian refugees are being portrayed as infiltrated by ISIS members). !
!
!
2. Media:!
!
Asylum seekers are often portrayed in the press as freeloaders [click for photo].!
14. 2015 ‘Migration Crisis’
1. Video explainer of backdrop to the current European ‘migrant crisis’.
!
The use of the word crisis should be questioned. The crisis seems to be centred on the origins of the refugees (from Muslim countries). As we saw when we
examine the criminalisation of asylum seekers, this fits in with the prevalent discourse connecting asylum seekers with terrorism.
!
[show video]
!
2. Repression of migrant movement across the border. [show video]
Hungary has taken on the role of protector of EU borders, putting up razor wire and refusing to allow refugees on trains. Similar repression in Macedonia
on the border with Greece.
!
Other EU countries, such as Denmark has put ads in Lebanese newspapers telling would-be migrants that Denmark has cut welfare for refugees and that
those given asylum will not be allowed to have their families brought to the country during the first year, that a residence permit is delivered only to those
who speak Danish, and that rejected asylum seekers are swiftly sent back to their home countries.
!
3. In AU, the government has committed to taking 12,000 refugees from Syria, taking the overall quota for the year to 18,000 (from 6,000). Several
commentators called for Christian refugees to be prioritised (click Sheehan quote).
e.g. SMH columnist, Paul Sheehan (backed by e.g. Minister Scott Morrison).
!
As Yassir Morsi commented in The Guardian, ‘The rhetoric of the debate is driven by an unstated, disingenuous demand: because we are the
compassionate ones, we can demand a return on our generosity. That means we get to openly decide who is a good refugee and who isn’t – Christians are
good, Muslims, not so much – without being accused of racism.’
!
15. 2015 ‘Migration Crisis’
1. Video explainer of backdrop to the current European ‘migrant crisis’.
!
The use of the word crisis should be questioned. The crisis seems to be centred on the origins of the refugees (from Muslim countries). As we saw when we
examine the criminalisation of asylum seekers, this fits in with the prevalent discourse connecting asylum seekers with terrorism.
!
[show video]
!
2. Repression of migrant movement across the border. [show video]
Hungary has taken on the role of protector of EU borders, putting up razor wire and refusing to allow refugees on trains. Similar repression in Macedonia
on the border with Greece.
!
Other EU countries, such as Denmark has put ads in Lebanese newspapers telling would-be migrants that Denmark has cut welfare for refugees and that
those given asylum will not be allowed to have their families brought to the country during the first year, that a residence permit is delivered only to those
who speak Danish, and that rejected asylum seekers are swiftly sent back to their home countries.
!
3. In AU, the government has committed to taking 12,000 refugees from Syria, taking the overall quota for the year to 18,000 (from 6,000). Several
commentators called for Christian refugees to be prioritised (click Sheehan quote).
e.g. SMH columnist, Paul Sheehan (backed by e.g. Minister Scott Morrison).
!
As Yassir Morsi commented in The Guardian, ‘The rhetoric of the debate is driven by an unstated, disingenuous demand: because we are the
compassionate ones, we can demand a return on our generosity. That means we get to openly decide who is a good refugee and who isn’t – Christians are
good, Muslims, not so much – without being accused of racism.’
!
16. 2015 ‘Migration Crisis’
1. Video explainer of backdrop to the current European ‘migrant crisis’.
!
The use of the word crisis should be questioned. The crisis seems to be centred on the origins of the refugees (from Muslim countries). As we saw when we
examine the criminalisation of asylum seekers, this fits in with the prevalent discourse connecting asylum seekers with terrorism.
!
[show video]
!
2. Repression of migrant movement across the border. [show video]
Hungary has taken on the role of protector of EU borders, putting up razor wire and refusing to allow refugees on trains. Similar repression in Macedonia
on the border with Greece.
!
Other EU countries, such as Denmark has put ads in Lebanese newspapers telling would-be migrants that Denmark has cut welfare for refugees and that
those given asylum will not be allowed to have their families brought to the country during the first year, that a residence permit is delivered only to those
who speak Danish, and that rejected asylum seekers are swiftly sent back to their home countries.
!
3. In AU, the government has committed to taking 12,000 refugees from Syria, taking the overall quota for the year to 18,000 (from 6,000). Several
commentators called for Christian refugees to be prioritised (click Sheehan quote).
e.g. SMH columnist, Paul Sheehan (backed by e.g. Minister Scott Morrison).
!
As Yassir Morsi commented in The Guardian, ‘The rhetoric of the debate is driven by an unstated, disingenuous demand: because we are the
compassionate ones, we can demand a return on our generosity. That means we get to openly decide who is a good refugee and who isn’t – Christians are
good, Muslims, not so much – without being accused of racism.’
!
17. 2015 ‘Migration Crisis’
1. Video explainer of backdrop to the current European ‘migrant crisis’.
!
The use of the word crisis should be questioned. The crisis seems to be centred on the origins of the refugees (from Muslim countries). As we saw when we
examine the criminalisation of asylum seekers, this fits in with the prevalent discourse connecting asylum seekers with terrorism.
!
[show video]
!
2. Repression of migrant movement across the border. [show video]
Hungary has taken on the role of protector of EU borders, putting up razor wire and refusing to allow refugees on trains. Similar repression in Macedonia
on the border with Greece.
!
Other EU countries, such as Denmark has put ads in Lebanese newspapers telling would-be migrants that Denmark has cut welfare for refugees and that
those given asylum will not be allowed to have their families brought to the country during the first year, that a residence permit is delivered only to those
who speak Danish, and that rejected asylum seekers are swiftly sent back to their home countries.
!
3. In AU, the government has committed to taking 12,000 refugees from Syria, taking the overall quota for the year to 18,000 (from 6,000). Several
commentators called for Christian refugees to be prioritised (click Sheehan quote).
e.g. SMH columnist, Paul Sheehan (backed by e.g. Minister Scott Morrison).
!
As Yassir Morsi commented in The Guardian, ‘The rhetoric of the debate is driven by an unstated, disingenuous demand: because we are the
compassionate ones, we can demand a return on our generosity. That means we get to openly decide who is a good refugee and who isn’t – Christians are
good, Muslims, not so much – without being accused of racism.’
!
18. 2015 ‘Migration Crisis’
1. Video explainer of backdrop to the current European ‘migrant crisis’.
!
The use of the word crisis should be questioned. The crisis seems to be centred on the origins of the refugees (from Muslim countries). As we saw when we
examine the criminalisation of asylum seekers, this fits in with the prevalent discourse connecting asylum seekers with terrorism.
!
[show video]
!
2. Repression of migrant movement across the border. [show video]
Hungary has taken on the role of protector of EU borders, putting up razor wire and refusing to allow refugees on trains. Similar repression in Macedonia
on the border with Greece.
!
Other EU countries, such as Denmark has put ads in Lebanese newspapers telling would-be migrants that Denmark has cut welfare for refugees and that
those given asylum will not be allowed to have their families brought to the country during the first year, that a residence permit is delivered only to those
who speak Danish, and that rejected asylum seekers are swiftly sent back to their home countries.
!
3. In AU, the government has committed to taking 12,000 refugees from Syria, taking the overall quota for the year to 18,000 (from 6,000). Several
commentators called for Christian refugees to be prioritised (click Sheehan quote).
e.g. SMH columnist, Paul Sheehan (backed by e.g. Minister Scott Morrison).
!
As Yassir Morsi commented in The Guardian, ‘The rhetoric of the debate is driven by an unstated, disingenuous demand: because we are the
compassionate ones, we can demand a return on our generosity. That means we get to openly decide who is a good refugee and who isn’t – Christians are
good, Muslims, not so much – without being accused of racism.’
!
19. 2015 ‘Migration Crisis’
“Syria is thus the eye of a broader storm and the Muslim
world is exporting its instability to Europe, via a mass
exodus of people.
!
What can or should Australia do? There is nothing we can
do about the ancient Sunni-Shia schism, but we can protect
those who have become collateral damage – Christians.”
!
Paul Sheehan, SMH , 7 September 2015
!
1. Video explainer of backdrop to the current European ‘migrant crisis’.
!
The use of the word crisis should be questioned. The crisis seems to be centred on the origins of the refugees (from Muslim countries). As we saw when we
examine the criminalisation of asylum seekers, this fits in with the prevalent discourse connecting asylum seekers with terrorism.
!
[show video]
!
2. Repression of migrant movement across the border. [show video]
Hungary has taken on the role of protector of EU borders, putting up razor wire and refusing to allow refugees on trains. Similar repression in Macedonia
on the border with Greece.
!
Other EU countries, such as Denmark has put ads in Lebanese newspapers telling would-be migrants that Denmark has cut welfare for refugees and that
those given asylum will not be allowed to have their families brought to the country during the first year, that a residence permit is delivered only to those
who speak Danish, and that rejected asylum seekers are swiftly sent back to their home countries.
!
3. In AU, the government has committed to taking 12,000 refugees from Syria, taking the overall quota for the year to 18,000 (from 6,000). Several
commentators called for Christian refugees to be prioritised (click Sheehan quote).
e.g. SMH columnist, Paul Sheehan (backed by e.g. Minister Scott Morrison).
!
As Yassir Morsi commented in The Guardian, ‘The rhetoric of the debate is driven by an unstated, disingenuous demand: because we are the
compassionate ones, we can demand a return on our generosity. That means we get to openly decide who is a good refugee and who isn’t – Christians are
good, Muslims, not so much – without being accused of racism.’
!
20. People-to-People action
2. Reactions of ordinary people seem to have contradicted the actions of governments.
!
Examples of people-to-people solidarity actions.
!
[click for photo]
going to refugee camps (e.g. Calais) - Daily Mail Newspaper offer of 1 pound tickets to Calais taken up by activists bringing clothes etc. to people in the
camp.
[click for photo]
German example of ‘Refugees Welcome initiative’ started in Berlin. People housing refugees (direct reaction to common criticisms of open borders
approaches - why don’t you have a refugee live in your house?)
Universities offering scholarships to refugees (e.g. WSU)
People driving refugees across the border after Hungary closed the border and trains were not leaving.
Also, activism during immigration raids (e.g. Peckham)
21. People-to-People action
2. Reactions of ordinary people seem to have contradicted the actions of governments.
!
Examples of people-to-people solidarity actions.
!
[click for photo]
going to refugee camps (e.g. Calais) - Daily Mail Newspaper offer of 1 pound tickets to Calais taken up by activists bringing clothes etc. to people in the
camp.
[click for photo]
German example of ‘Refugees Welcome initiative’ started in Berlin. People housing refugees (direct reaction to common criticisms of open borders
approaches - why don’t you have a refugee live in your house?)
Universities offering scholarships to refugees (e.g. WSU)
People driving refugees across the border after Hungary closed the border and trains were not leaving.
Also, activism during immigration raids (e.g. Peckham)
22. Australia and
Mandatory Detention
Origins
Australia: a Global
laboratory
1. Origins:
Mandatory detention in AU brought in under Keating in 1992.
!
Quote from Immigration minister of the time, Gerry Hand.
!
AU was the first country to introduce mandatory indefinite detention for asylum seekers.
!
Needs to be seen in the global context of immigration policy. Although the Refugee Convention states that signatories must grant asylum to those fleeing
persecution etc., this conflicts with states’ demands to control who enters their borders and settles.
!
The attitude to asylum seekers must be seen within this context. Australia since the early 90s has sought to separate between so-called legitimate (‘legal’)
and illegitimate (‘illegal’) migrants.
!
The designation of those who arrive by boat as ‘illegal’ is arbitrary because it does not mean that they are any less in danger than those who arrive by
plane or who come via resettlement programs (e.g. Syrians in offshore detention are ostensibly the same people as those being chosen for resettlement
under recently announced programme).
!
The very existence of mandatory detention for asylum seekers establishes the notion that there are ‘good’ and ‘bad’ asylum seekers and right and wrong
methods to enter the country.
!
Mandatory indefinite detention is arguable worse than imprisonment because, unlike in the case of a convicted criminal, there is neither a crime (seeking
asylum is legal under international law) nor a sentence - asylum seekers do not know how long they will spend in detention nor if they will be allowed to
settle in AU once their case has been heard.
23. Australia and
Mandatory Detention
Origins
Australia: a Global
laboratory
“I believe it is crucial that all persons who come
to Australia without prior authorisation not be
released into the community.Their release would
undermine the Government’s strategy for
determining their refugee claims or entry claims.
Indeed, I believe it is vital to Australia that this be
prevented as far as possible.The Government is
determined that a clear signal be sent that
migration to Australia may not be achieved by
simply arriving in this country and expecting to be
allowed into the community.”
Gerry Hand, Minister for Immigration 1992
1. Origins:
Mandatory detention in AU brought in under Keating in 1992.
!
Quote from Immigration minister of the time, Gerry Hand.
!
AU was the first country to introduce mandatory indefinite detention for asylum seekers.
!
Needs to be seen in the global context of immigration policy. Although the Refugee Convention states that signatories must grant asylum to those fleeing
persecution etc., this conflicts with states’ demands to control who enters their borders and settles.
!
The attitude to asylum seekers must be seen within this context. Australia since the early 90s has sought to separate between so-called legitimate (‘legal’)
and illegitimate (‘illegal’) migrants.
!
The designation of those who arrive by boat as ‘illegal’ is arbitrary because it does not mean that they are any less in danger than those who arrive by
plane or who come via resettlement programs (e.g. Syrians in offshore detention are ostensibly the same people as those being chosen for resettlement
under recently announced programme).
!
The very existence of mandatory detention for asylum seekers establishes the notion that there are ‘good’ and ‘bad’ asylum seekers and right and wrong
methods to enter the country.
!
Mandatory indefinite detention is arguable worse than imprisonment because, unlike in the case of a convicted criminal, there is neither a crime (seeking
asylum is legal under international law) nor a sentence - asylum seekers do not know how long they will spend in detention nor if they will be allowed to
settle in AU once their case has been heard.
24. Australia and
Mandatory Detention
Origins
Australia: a Global
laboratory
“Australia has long been a laboratory for the
invention and export of policies around the
world that have contributed to the same
dynamic elsewhere—as with the export of
‘offshore’ internment camps, electoral tactics
that demonise asylum seekers, subcontracting
mechanisms, and so on.’
Angela Mitropoulos
1. Origins:
Mandatory detention in AU brought in under Keating in 1992.
!
Quote from Immigration minister of the time, Gerry Hand.
!
AU was the first country to introduce mandatory indefinite detention for asylum seekers.
!
Needs to be seen in the global context of immigration policy. Although the Refugee Convention states that signatories must grant asylum to those fleeing
persecution etc., this conflicts with states’ demands to control who enters their borders and settles.
!
The attitude to asylum seekers must be seen within this context. Australia since the early 90s has sought to separate between so-called legitimate (‘legal’)
and illegitimate (‘illegal’) migrants.
!
The designation of those who arrive by boat as ‘illegal’ is arbitrary because it does not mean that they are any less in danger than those who arrive by
plane or who come via resettlement programs (e.g. Syrians in offshore detention are ostensibly the same people as those being chosen for resettlement
under recently announced programme).
!
The very existence of mandatory detention for asylum seekers establishes the notion that there are ‘good’ and ‘bad’ asylum seekers and right and wrong
methods to enter the country.
!
Mandatory indefinite detention is arguable worse than imprisonment because, unlike in the case of a convicted criminal, there is neither a crime (seeking
asylum is legal under international law) nor a sentence - asylum seekers do not know how long they will spend in detention nor if they will be allowed to
settle in AU once their case has been heard.
25. The detention
deterrent
The AU government has, since 2013, claimed that seeking asylum by boat and has used propaganda to send a message to those who seek to come by boat
that to do so is illegal. It has militarised border security through the appointment of a 3 star general to lead ‘Operation Sovereign Borders’, combination of
boat interceptions, tow backs, turn backs and a policy of mandatory indefinite detention on Nauru and Manus island with no hope of resettlement for those
found to be refugees in Australia (show video).
!
The reintroduction of offshore detention in Nauru and Manus Island (PNG) since 2013 has been presented as a deterrent to asylum seekers attempting to
come to AU by boat.
!
The LNP mantra of ‘stop the boats’ (also espoused by Labor) is presented as humanitarian - stops deaths at sea.
!
However, the harsh policy of boat turn backs and tow backs and the secrecy enveloping ‘Operation Sovereign Borders’ about what have been called ‘on-
water operational matters’ means that the AU public does not have a full account of whether lives are still being lost at sea.
!
As AM notes, ‘Violence is integral to the policies of mandatory detention and Operation Sovereign Borders…. In its actual conduct, as was predicted, the
Australian government has endangered lives by successive acts of refoulement, is accused of causing injury to asylum seekers, and has undertaken
unauthorized ‘people-smuggling’ into Indonesia.’
!
2. Life in the detention centres of Nauru and Manus Island can only be described as dangerous. There have been two deaths - Reza Berati, 24 yr old Iranian
asylum seeker hit on the head with a rock during protests on 17 February 2014 and Hamid Kehazai who died following an infection that went untreated in
October 2014.
!
Other cases include rape of 23 yr old Iranian woman who later attempted suicide and has been separated from her family who have been forbidden from
having contact with her; children displaying suicidal behaviours and inappropriate sexual behaviour due to high levels of sexual abuse from both guards
26. The detention
deterrent
The AU government has, since 2013, claimed that seeking asylum by boat and has used propaganda to send a message to those who seek to come by boat
that to do so is illegal. It has militarised border security through the appointment of a 3 star general to lead ‘Operation Sovereign Borders’, combination of
boat interceptions, tow backs, turn backs and a policy of mandatory indefinite detention on Nauru and Manus island with no hope of resettlement for those
found to be refugees in Australia (show video).
!
The reintroduction of offshore detention in Nauru and Manus Island (PNG) since 2013 has been presented as a deterrent to asylum seekers attempting to
come to AU by boat.
!
The LNP mantra of ‘stop the boats’ (also espoused by Labor) is presented as humanitarian - stops deaths at sea.
!
However, the harsh policy of boat turn backs and tow backs and the secrecy enveloping ‘Operation Sovereign Borders’ about what have been called ‘on-
water operational matters’ means that the AU public does not have a full account of whether lives are still being lost at sea.
!
As AM notes, ‘Violence is integral to the policies of mandatory detention and Operation Sovereign Borders…. In its actual conduct, as was predicted, the
Australian government has endangered lives by successive acts of refoulement, is accused of causing injury to asylum seekers, and has undertaken
unauthorized ‘people-smuggling’ into Indonesia.’
!
2. Life in the detention centres of Nauru and Manus Island can only be described as dangerous. There have been two deaths - Reza Berati, 24 yr old Iranian
asylum seeker hit on the head with a rock during protests on 17 February 2014 and Hamid Kehazai who died following an infection that went untreated in
October 2014.
!
Other cases include rape of 23 yr old Iranian woman who later attempted suicide and has been separated from her family who have been forbidden from
having contact with her; children displaying suicidal behaviours and inappropriate sexual behaviour due to high levels of sexual abuse from both guards
27. The detention
deterrent
The AU government has, since 2013, claimed that seeking asylum by boat and has used propaganda to send a message to those who seek to come by boat
that to do so is illegal. It has militarised border security through the appointment of a 3 star general to lead ‘Operation Sovereign Borders’, combination of
boat interceptions, tow backs, turn backs and a policy of mandatory indefinite detention on Nauru and Manus island with no hope of resettlement for those
found to be refugees in Australia (show video).
!
The reintroduction of offshore detention in Nauru and Manus Island (PNG) since 2013 has been presented as a deterrent to asylum seekers attempting to
come to AU by boat.
!
The LNP mantra of ‘stop the boats’ (also espoused by Labor) is presented as humanitarian - stops deaths at sea.
!
However, the harsh policy of boat turn backs and tow backs and the secrecy enveloping ‘Operation Sovereign Borders’ about what have been called ‘on-
water operational matters’ means that the AU public does not have a full account of whether lives are still being lost at sea.
!
As AM notes, ‘Violence is integral to the policies of mandatory detention and Operation Sovereign Borders…. In its actual conduct, as was predicted, the
Australian government has endangered lives by successive acts of refoulement, is accused of causing injury to asylum seekers, and has undertaken
unauthorized ‘people-smuggling’ into Indonesia.’
!
2. Life in the detention centres of Nauru and Manus Island can only be described as dangerous. There have been two deaths - Reza Berati, 24 yr old Iranian
asylum seeker hit on the head with a rock during protests on 17 February 2014 and Hamid Kehazai who died following an infection that went untreated in
October 2014.
!
Other cases include rape of 23 yr old Iranian woman who later attempted suicide and has been separated from her family who have been forbidden from
having contact with her; children displaying suicidal behaviours and inappropriate sexual behaviour due to high levels of sexual abuse from both guards
28. The detention
deterrent
The AU government has, since 2013, claimed that seeking asylum by boat and has used propaganda to send a message to those who seek to come by boat
that to do so is illegal. It has militarised border security through the appointment of a 3 star general to lead ‘Operation Sovereign Borders’, combination of
boat interceptions, tow backs, turn backs and a policy of mandatory indefinite detention on Nauru and Manus island with no hope of resettlement for those
found to be refugees in Australia (show video).
!
The reintroduction of offshore detention in Nauru and Manus Island (PNG) since 2013 has been presented as a deterrent to asylum seekers attempting to
come to AU by boat.
!
The LNP mantra of ‘stop the boats’ (also espoused by Labor) is presented as humanitarian - stops deaths at sea.
!
However, the harsh policy of boat turn backs and tow backs and the secrecy enveloping ‘Operation Sovereign Borders’ about what have been called ‘on-
water operational matters’ means that the AU public does not have a full account of whether lives are still being lost at sea.
!
As AM notes, ‘Violence is integral to the policies of mandatory detention and Operation Sovereign Borders…. In its actual conduct, as was predicted, the
Australian government has endangered lives by successive acts of refoulement, is accused of causing injury to asylum seekers, and has undertaken
unauthorized ‘people-smuggling’ into Indonesia.’
!
2. Life in the detention centres of Nauru and Manus Island can only be described as dangerous. There have been two deaths - Reza Berati, 24 yr old Iranian
asylum seeker hit on the head with a rock during protests on 17 February 2014 and Hamid Kehazai who died following an infection that went untreated in
October 2014.
!
Other cases include rape of 23 yr old Iranian woman who later attempted suicide and has been separated from her family who have been forbidden from
having contact with her; children displaying suicidal behaviours and inappropriate sexual behaviour due to high levels of sexual abuse from both guards
29. The Detention industry
The image shows the progression of private contracts for running detention centres on and offshore in AU since 1992.!
!
The detention of asylum seekers has long been a profit-making industry (link to prison industrial complex from week 10).!
!
[click on image for link to interactive map]!
!
Serco and Transfield Services are the two biggest contractors for the government. (Transfield run offshore centres since 2012). It has earned almost $3 billion and is about
to renew its contract with the government for another five years (under new name Broad Spectrum - parent company distancing itself from detention).!
!
But not for profits have also made a lot of money out of detention, including the Salvos, Save the Children, Red Cross etc.!
!
[click for figures break down]!
!
ABC Fact check: Human Rights law Centre, Daniel Webb, claimed that AU expenditure for offshore detention was five times higher that UN programme in SE Asia. ABC
Fact check ran the numbers and found Webb was right: ‘Using the exchange rate at the time of Mr Webb's claim, Australia is currently spending more than five times the
amount on offshore processing than the UNHCR spends in South East Asia.’!
!
So, it is important to understand mandatory detention as a public-private partnership. While the government wishes to send a message of harsh deterrence to stop people
seeking asylum by boat, private companies and not for profits have a lot to gain financially.!
!
Transfield for example is a loss making company that has been unable to pay dividends to its share holders in recent years (incl. this year). [show asx chart]. So detention
contracts of over $2 bill for 5 years from government is essential to its survival.!
30. The Detention industry
Offshore Detention Total Spend 2013-14 =
$3.07bn
!
Offshore spend per person = $859,363
!
Onshore per person = $157,014
!
Community per person = $131,723
The image shows the progression of private contracts for running detention centres on and offshore in AU since 1992.!
!
The detention of asylum seekers has long been a profit-making industry (link to prison industrial complex from week 10).!
!
[click on image for link to interactive map]!
!
Serco and Transfield Services are the two biggest contractors for the government. (Transfield run offshore centres since 2012). It has earned almost $3 billion and is about
to renew its contract with the government for another five years (under new name Broad Spectrum - parent company distancing itself from detention).!
!
But not for profits have also made a lot of money out of detention, including the Salvos, Save the Children, Red Cross etc.!
!
[click for figures break down]!
!
ABC Fact check: Human Rights law Centre, Daniel Webb, claimed that AU expenditure for offshore detention was five times higher that UN programme in SE Asia. ABC
Fact check ran the numbers and found Webb was right: ‘Using the exchange rate at the time of Mr Webb's claim, Australia is currently spending more than five times the
amount on offshore processing than the UNHCR spends in South East Asia.’!
!
So, it is important to understand mandatory detention as a public-private partnership. While the government wishes to send a message of harsh deterrence to stop people
seeking asylum by boat, private companies and not for profits have a lot to gain financially.!
!
Transfield for example is a loss making company that has been unable to pay dividends to its share holders in recent years (incl. this year). [show asx chart]. So detention
contracts of over $2 bill for 5 years from government is essential to its survival.!
31. The Detention industry
The image shows the progression of private contracts for running detention centres on and offshore in AU since 1992.!
!
The detention of asylum seekers has long been a profit-making industry (link to prison industrial complex from week 10).!
!
[click on image for link to interactive map]!
!
Serco and Transfield Services are the two biggest contractors for the government. (Transfield run offshore centres since 2012). It has earned almost $3 billion and is about
to renew its contract with the government for another five years (under new name Broad Spectrum - parent company distancing itself from detention).!
!
But not for profits have also made a lot of money out of detention, including the Salvos, Save the Children, Red Cross etc.!
!
[click for figures break down]!
!
ABC Fact check: Human Rights law Centre, Daniel Webb, claimed that AU expenditure for offshore detention was five times higher that UN programme in SE Asia. ABC
Fact check ran the numbers and found Webb was right: ‘Using the exchange rate at the time of Mr Webb's claim, Australia is currently spending more than five times the
amount on offshore processing than the UNHCR spends in South East Asia.’!
!
So, it is important to understand mandatory detention as a public-private partnership. While the government wishes to send a message of harsh deterrence to stop people
seeking asylum by boat, private companies and not for profits have a lot to gain financially.!
!
Transfield for example is a loss making company that has been unable to pay dividends to its share holders in recent years (incl. this year). [show asx chart]. So detention
contracts of over $2 bill for 5 years from government is essential to its survival.!
32. Boycott & divestment
campaigns
Since early 2014, there has been a focus in refugee activism on encouraging divestment from the mandatory detention industry.
!
Successful boycott of Sydney Biennale leading to resignation of its director, Luca B-N (Transfield heir).
!
Divestment from Transfield by HESTA superannuation fund and pressure mounting within other super funds.
!
Other campaigns - UniSuper Divest, Dropkick Decmil (encouraging Freos to divest from Decmil, another detention contractor).
!
Explain ‘risk manage this’
33. Boycott & divestment
campaigns
Since early 2014, there has been a focus in refugee activism on encouraging divestment from the mandatory detention industry.
!
Successful boycott of Sydney Biennale leading to resignation of its director, Luca B-N (Transfield heir).
!
Divestment from Transfield by HESTA superannuation fund and pressure mounting within other super funds.
!
Other campaigns - UniSuper Divest, Dropkick Decmil (encouraging Freos to divest from Decmil, another detention contractor).
!
Explain ‘risk manage this’
34. Boycott & divestment
campaigns
Since early 2014, there has been a focus in refugee activism on encouraging divestment from the mandatory detention industry.
!
Successful boycott of Sydney Biennale leading to resignation of its director, Luca B-N (Transfield heir).
!
Divestment from Transfield by HESTA superannuation fund and pressure mounting within other super funds.
!
Other campaigns - UniSuper Divest, Dropkick Decmil (encouraging Freos to divest from Decmil, another detention contractor).
!
Explain ‘risk manage this’
35. Falling from the sky
Guardian UK report (25.4.2013):!
‘A young man whose body was found on a pavement in west London almost certainly died after stowing away inside the landing gear of a British Airways flight from Angola in a desperate attempt to make a new life in the UK, an inquest has heard.!
José Matada was either dead or at the point of death due to hypothermia and lack of oxygen when he fell from the plane as its undercarriage opened for its descent into Heathrow airport, west London coroners court was told.!
He died on his 26th birthday, with a single pound coin in his pocket, as well as currency from Botswana. He is believed to have originally come from Mozambique, but authorities have been unable to trace any family or official confirmation of his identity.!
His body was found on the pavement of Portman Avenue, in East Sheen, an affluent west London suburb, shortly before 7.45am on 9 September last year, just after flight BA76 from Luanda, the Angolan capital, passed overhead.’!
!In ‘Falling from the Sky’ (2010), Les Back describes a number of other similar events, in 2001 and 2002. On one occasion, a driver saw a body falling from the sky, but no one was ever found.!
!Clearly, people are taking desperate measures to get to their destination of choice.!
!In Australia, people take voyages on overcrowded and unseaworthy boats. In Europe, asylum seekers cling to the undercarriage of the high-speed Eurostar train into the tunnel across the English channel.!
In 2009, the French government dismantled a camp in the port city of Calais, known as ‘the jungle’, where migrants camped waiting for their chance to cross to the UK in this way. !
!Despite this, people keep finding ways to get in. !
!Nevertheless, there seems to be a disconnect between these human stories of bravery and desperation and the ability to extend empathy.!
!Les Back suggests this is because the words ‘immigrant’ and ‘immigration’ have become loaded with negativity (as we shall see in the next slide).!
!Around 150,000 migrant visas are granted to Australia each year. However, only around 14,000 asylum seekers are granted protection visas. While people are waiting to have their claims for asylum assessed, they are not allowed to work. !
!Despite popular opinion, many asylum seekers are highly skilled. The only thing that separates them from migrants entering through a migrant worker visa programme (e.g. 457) is the perception of illegality. !
!How is this perception of illegality achieved?!
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36. Tutorial Questions
Asylum Myths
List prevalent myths about
asylum seekers and
refugees.
What are the counter
arguments?
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How are ‘moral panics’
about asylum seekers and
refugees created?
Why have societal
attitudes towards refugees
changed so dramatically
over the last two decades?