The government and the Department of Immigration have repeatedly claimed that Australia's responses to refugees were generous in the past and continue to be generous in the present, and suggested that generosity can be measured numerically. Many refugee advocacy groups have repeatedly implied that Australia's responses to refugees in the past were generous, and that the current policies towards refugees and asylum seekers represent an aberration. They have also pointed out that refugees make good immigrants and that they have made a huge contribution to Australia
© 2002 Kluwer Academic PublishersAustralia has a long history of offering protection to refugees. In...
The complex immigration status of asylum seekers applying for protection, combined with having to co...
Swinburne Professor Klaus Neumann writes on how Australia could better respond to asylum seekers
The current Australian Government and many refugee advocates claim that Australia’s response to refu...
Providing a ‘home for the oppressed’? Historical perspectives on Australian responses to refugee
Article first published online: 10 JUN 2014When Australia pledged to accept 15,000 Jewish refugees f...
The argument for treating refugees humanely rests in the present and the future rather than the past...
'Refuge Australia' debunks several commonly held assumptions about Australia's humanitarian record. ...
This background note describes the current situation with regard to refugee entitlements to social s...
Introduction Australia has a long history of accepting refugees and other humanitarian entrants fro...
Key to untangling the asylum seeker policy knot is increasing humanitarian settlement intake. Can Au...
Today, Australia’s response to asylum-seeking ‘boat people’ is a hot-button issue ...
Today, Australia's response to asylum-seeking 'boat people' is a hot-button issue that feeds the pol...
When Coalition Prime Minister John Howard declared in 2001 that it was “in Australia’s national inte...
Australia\u27s asylum seeker policies are not widely understood. They are complex, and have changed ...
© 2002 Kluwer Academic PublishersAustralia has a long history of offering protection to refugees. In...
The complex immigration status of asylum seekers applying for protection, combined with having to co...
Swinburne Professor Klaus Neumann writes on how Australia could better respond to asylum seekers
The current Australian Government and many refugee advocates claim that Australia’s response to refu...
Providing a ‘home for the oppressed’? Historical perspectives on Australian responses to refugee
Article first published online: 10 JUN 2014When Australia pledged to accept 15,000 Jewish refugees f...
The argument for treating refugees humanely rests in the present and the future rather than the past...
'Refuge Australia' debunks several commonly held assumptions about Australia's humanitarian record. ...
This background note describes the current situation with regard to refugee entitlements to social s...
Introduction Australia has a long history of accepting refugees and other humanitarian entrants fro...
Key to untangling the asylum seeker policy knot is increasing humanitarian settlement intake. Can Au...
Today, Australia’s response to asylum-seeking ‘boat people’ is a hot-button issue ...
Today, Australia's response to asylum-seeking 'boat people' is a hot-button issue that feeds the pol...
When Coalition Prime Minister John Howard declared in 2001 that it was “in Australia’s national inte...
Australia\u27s asylum seeker policies are not widely understood. They are complex, and have changed ...
© 2002 Kluwer Academic PublishersAustralia has a long history of offering protection to refugees. In...
The complex immigration status of asylum seekers applying for protection, combined with having to co...
Swinburne Professor Klaus Neumann writes on how Australia could better respond to asylum seekers