How do Australian institutions and political leaders draw on history to tell us who we are? How do they make sense of Australia's past as a country of immigration and a nation that has accommodated hundreds of thousands of refugees
Providing a ‘home for the oppressed’? Historical perspectives on Australian responses to refugee
References to the past play a crucial role in the development of government policy. Those drafting a...
This paper examines how the ‘ideal’ refugee is conceptualized in discussions about Australia’s human...
By Klaus Neumann, Swinburne University of Technology How do Australian institutions and political l...
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...
The current Australian Government and many refugee advocates claim that Australia’s response to refu...
This book revisits Australian histories of refugee arrivals and settlement – with a particular focus...
The debate about Australia’s response to refugees and asylum seekers is largely devoid of a historic...
Outlining some of the features of migrant belonging brought into relief by debate over refugees and ...
A review of Klaus Neumann's Refuge Australia: Australia's Humanitarian Record (UNSW Press, Sydney, 2...
The government and the Department of Immigration have repeatedly claimed that Australia's responses ...
“FROM a vantage point in the First World, debates around refugees carry a strong whiff of parochiali...
Introduction The history of Australia over the last 200 years is one of immigration, the story of m...
The question of who ‘belongs’ is a matter of hot debate across many Western nation- states. As a res...
Providing a ‘home for the oppressed’? Historical perspectives on Australian responses to refugee
References to the past play a crucial role in the development of government policy. Those drafting a...
This paper examines how the ‘ideal’ refugee is conceptualized in discussions about Australia’s human...
By Klaus Neumann, Swinburne University of Technology How do Australian institutions and political l...
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...
The current Australian Government and many refugee advocates claim that Australia’s response to refu...
This book revisits Australian histories of refugee arrivals and settlement – with a particular focus...
The debate about Australia’s response to refugees and asylum seekers is largely devoid of a historic...
Outlining some of the features of migrant belonging brought into relief by debate over refugees and ...
A review of Klaus Neumann's Refuge Australia: Australia's Humanitarian Record (UNSW Press, Sydney, 2...
The government and the Department of Immigration have repeatedly claimed that Australia's responses ...
“FROM a vantage point in the First World, debates around refugees carry a strong whiff of parochiali...
Introduction The history of Australia over the last 200 years is one of immigration, the story of m...
The question of who ‘belongs’ is a matter of hot debate across many Western nation- states. As a res...
Providing a ‘home for the oppressed’? Historical perspectives on Australian responses to refugee
References to the past play a crucial role in the development of government policy. Those drafting a...
This paper examines how the ‘ideal’ refugee is conceptualized in discussions about Australia’s human...