This paper explores the everyday security of refugee and asylum-seeking mothers before, during and after irregular migration. Based on narrative interviews with mothers residing in Melbourne, we analyse how their needs both do and do not fall into Nussbaum’s capabilities list. We argue that Nussbaum’s framework is not sufficient to capture the gendered aspects of everyday security related to carework. Based on this analysis, we suggest a new framework to understand carework and everyday security in the context of refugee and asylum-seeking women. Centring carework in the discussion of the everyday security of people seeking asylum is a significant step away from traditional security literature and allows mothers’ voices to be highlighted in...
There is growing interest in using Sen’s Capability Approach (CA) as a framework to assess the quali...
Scholarship on asylum often overlooks bureaucracy, folding its associated sites and practices into t...
‘We wanted to rebuild our lives, that was all’. This statement appears in Hannah Arendt’s polemic es...
This article analyses how legal precarity overlaps with different forms of gendered racialization an...
This thesis reports a qualitative study undertaken to explore the mothering experiences of asylum-se...
This paper explores the impact of the UK’s racialized asylum system on mothers and their children. A...
There are numerous people around the world who are forced to leave their country and family due to v...
This research contributes a gendered analysis of the securitisation of migration by focusing on wome...
Inhabiting Borders, Routes Home: Youth, Gender, Asylum by Ala SirriyehFarnham, UK: Ashgate, 2013...
The recent refugee crisis in Europe has become a prominent human security issues that continues to r...
The interrelation between gender and the asylum-seeking process has received increasing attention wi...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Euro...
Thesis advisor: Margaret . LombeThe present study is situated at the intersection of the topics of ...
This study takes an interdisciplinary approach to understanding the multi-dimensionality of social s...
Background or context: refugee and asylum seekers are over represented in maternal death data. Many ...
There is growing interest in using Sen’s Capability Approach (CA) as a framework to assess the quali...
Scholarship on asylum often overlooks bureaucracy, folding its associated sites and practices into t...
‘We wanted to rebuild our lives, that was all’. This statement appears in Hannah Arendt’s polemic es...
This article analyses how legal precarity overlaps with different forms of gendered racialization an...
This thesis reports a qualitative study undertaken to explore the mothering experiences of asylum-se...
This paper explores the impact of the UK’s racialized asylum system on mothers and their children. A...
There are numerous people around the world who are forced to leave their country and family due to v...
This research contributes a gendered analysis of the securitisation of migration by focusing on wome...
Inhabiting Borders, Routes Home: Youth, Gender, Asylum by Ala SirriyehFarnham, UK: Ashgate, 2013...
The recent refugee crisis in Europe has become a prominent human security issues that continues to r...
The interrelation between gender and the asylum-seeking process has received increasing attention wi...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Euro...
Thesis advisor: Margaret . LombeThe present study is situated at the intersection of the topics of ...
This study takes an interdisciplinary approach to understanding the multi-dimensionality of social s...
Background or context: refugee and asylum seekers are over represented in maternal death data. Many ...
There is growing interest in using Sen’s Capability Approach (CA) as a framework to assess the quali...
Scholarship on asylum often overlooks bureaucracy, folding its associated sites and practices into t...
‘We wanted to rebuild our lives, that was all’. This statement appears in Hannah Arendt’s polemic es...