Increasingly, political responses to asylum seekers and refugees have become more punitive and exclusionary in many receiving countries. This hardening reflects a broader shift to the right: toward an emphasis on national security and borders, on economic rationalism, and monoculturalism. How can people who are campaigning for less exclusionary policies and laws respond? We review an ethnographic case study in the town of Woodside, South Australia and the first author’s discursive research on the political speeches of Australian politicians. These suggest that pragmatic interventions emphasizing win/win solutions and mainstream appeals are useful. Two of these interventions, which we review in this paper, are: 1) creating social and economi...
Today, Australia’s response to asylum-seeking ‘boat people’ is a hot-button issue ...
The negative attitudes fostered by political rhetoric against asylum seekers create significant prob...
This paper examines the rise of an asylum seeker and refugee advocacy movement in Australia in recen...
Increasingly, political responses to asylum seekers and refugees have become more punitive and exclu...
Critiques of humanitarianism have highlighted its conceptual ambiguity and its usefulness in justify...
In recent years an extensive body of discursive research has accumulated on race, immigration and as...
Critiques of humanitarianism have highlighted its conceptual ambiguity and its usefulness in justify...
As the refugee and asylum seeker crisis has grown, arguments about immigration and migration have be...
With increasingly exclusionary policies towards refugees and asylum seekers, Australia has experienc...
The arrival of asylum seekers in Australia during the 1980s through to the first decade of the twent...
This paper discursively analyses advocates' explanations of asylum seeking in the 2001 Australian pa...
Issues of asylum seeking have received significant public and media attention in Australia since mid...
The government and the Department of Immigration have repeatedly claimed that Australia's responses ...
Today, Australia's response to asylum-seeking 'boat people' is a hot-button issue that feeds the pol...
Rates of migration worldwide have barely changed over the last 100 years, but in recent decades immi...
Today, Australia’s response to asylum-seeking ‘boat people’ is a hot-button issue ...
The negative attitudes fostered by political rhetoric against asylum seekers create significant prob...
This paper examines the rise of an asylum seeker and refugee advocacy movement in Australia in recen...
Increasingly, political responses to asylum seekers and refugees have become more punitive and exclu...
Critiques of humanitarianism have highlighted its conceptual ambiguity and its usefulness in justify...
In recent years an extensive body of discursive research has accumulated on race, immigration and as...
Critiques of humanitarianism have highlighted its conceptual ambiguity and its usefulness in justify...
As the refugee and asylum seeker crisis has grown, arguments about immigration and migration have be...
With increasingly exclusionary policies towards refugees and asylum seekers, Australia has experienc...
The arrival of asylum seekers in Australia during the 1980s through to the first decade of the twent...
This paper discursively analyses advocates' explanations of asylum seeking in the 2001 Australian pa...
Issues of asylum seeking have received significant public and media attention in Australia since mid...
The government and the Department of Immigration have repeatedly claimed that Australia's responses ...
Today, Australia's response to asylum-seeking 'boat people' is a hot-button issue that feeds the pol...
Rates of migration worldwide have barely changed over the last 100 years, but in recent decades immi...
Today, Australia’s response to asylum-seeking ‘boat people’ is a hot-button issue ...
The negative attitudes fostered by political rhetoric against asylum seekers create significant prob...
This paper examines the rise of an asylum seeker and refugee advocacy movement in Australia in recen...