Acts of cruelty : Australia's immigration laws and experiences of people seeking protection after arriving by plane / Aileen Crowe ; foreword by Michael Kirby AC CMG.

By: Crowe, Aileen [author.]Contributor(s): Kirby, M. D. (Michael Donald), 1939- [author of foreword.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: Armadale, Victoria : Palaver, 2022Copyright date: ©2022Edition: First Palaver editionDescription: 229 pages : illustrations, charts ; 24 cmContent type: text | still image Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780645588101Subject(s): Refugees -- Australia | Illegal immigration -- Australia | Noncitizen detention centers | International relations | National security -- Australia | Australia -- Emigration and immigration -- Government policyDDC classification: 325.210994 Summary: This book documents the complex, drawn out and harsh legal procedures and historically racist and toxic immigration culture that await people arriving by plane and subsequently seeking refugee status in Australia. This story has hitherto been sidelined because of the more notorious offshore detention policies of successive Australian governments for people arriving by boat. In this book, research by Dr Aileen Crowe, a Franciscan nun and refugee advocate, provides both detailed insight into the lived experiences of such would-be migrants and the tangle of immigration processes and laws which they must navigate at their peril. The author's support and advocacy role brings her close to individuals and families attempting to escape numerous forms of persecution in their own countries as they confront further trauma in seeking Australias protection. The book is an important and challenging document for potential migrants and asylum seekers, politicians, lawyers, students of international relations, and the general public internationally.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

This book documents the complex, drawn out and harsh legal procedures and historically racist and toxic immigration culture that await people arriving by plane and subsequently seeking refugee status in Australia. This story has hitherto been sidelined because of the more notorious offshore detention policies of successive Australian governments for people arriving by boat. In this book, research by Dr Aileen Crowe, a Franciscan nun and refugee advocate, provides both detailed insight into the lived experiences of such would-be migrants and the tangle of immigration processes and laws which they must navigate at their peril. The author's support and advocacy role brings her close to individuals and families attempting to escape numerous forms of persecution in their own countries as they confront further trauma in seeking Australias protection. The book is an important and challenging document for potential migrants and asylum seekers, politicians, lawyers, students of international relations, and the general public internationally.

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