TY - JOUR
T1 - Nowhere to be found' : disabled refugees and asylum seekers within the Australian resettlement landscape
AU - Soldatic, Karen
AU - Somers, Kelly
AU - Buckley, Amma
AU - Fleay, Caroline
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - Australia has long placed restrictions on the immigration of people with disabilities. While recent civil society mobilisation has forced some shift in policy, it is far from clear whether this will result in people with disabilities being accepted as immigrants. The issue is complicated further for people defined as refugee and asylum seekers' who have encountered the migration restrictions on disability. As a result of this policy landscape, there is limited rigorous research that seeks to understand the social inclusion and participation of disabled refugees and asylum seekers within the resettlement process. An extensive review reveals that refugees and asylum seekers with disabilities remain largely absent from both resettlement literature and disability research. This paper summarises the limited available research in the area around the following themes: processes of offshore migration and the way that disability is assessed under Australia's refugee legislation; the uncertainty of the prevalence of disability within refugee and asylum seeker communities; the provision of resettlement services, both mainstream and disability-specific, through the transitional period and beyond, and the invisibility of asylum seekers with disabilities in Australia's immigration detention centres, community-based arrangements and offshore processing centres. To conclude, the paper outlines implications for further research, policy and practice in the Australian context.
AB - Australia has long placed restrictions on the immigration of people with disabilities. While recent civil society mobilisation has forced some shift in policy, it is far from clear whether this will result in people with disabilities being accepted as immigrants. The issue is complicated further for people defined as refugee and asylum seekers' who have encountered the migration restrictions on disability. As a result of this policy landscape, there is limited rigorous research that seeks to understand the social inclusion and participation of disabled refugees and asylum seekers within the resettlement process. An extensive review reveals that refugees and asylum seekers with disabilities remain largely absent from both resettlement literature and disability research. This paper summarises the limited available research in the area around the following themes: processes of offshore migration and the way that disability is assessed under Australia's refugee legislation; the uncertainty of the prevalence of disability within refugee and asylum seeker communities; the provision of resettlement services, both mainstream and disability-specific, through the transitional period and beyond, and the invisibility of asylum seekers with disabilities in Australia's immigration detention centres, community-based arrangements and offshore processing centres. To conclude, the paper outlines implications for further research, policy and practice in the Australian context.
KW - Australia
KW - asylum seekers
KW - people with disabilities
KW - refugees
UR - http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:36812
UR - https://dgsjournal.org/volume-2-number-1/
M3 - Article
SN - 2050-7364
VL - 2
SP - 501
EP - 522
JO - Disability and the Global South
JF - Disability and the Global South
IS - 1
ER -