Refugee Conference 2011 (incomplete)
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- Educación
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Confronting Refugee Myths
With a Federal election looming, Associate Professor Jane McAdam from the Faculty of Law's International Refugee and Migration Law Project dispels some common misconceptions about asylum seekers.
TO VIEW A LONGER VERSION OF THIS INTERVIEW CLICK ON THE LINK AT THE RIGHT OF THIS PAGE.
Trouble viewing this video? Watch it on YouTube - click on "YouTube version" at right.
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2011 Refugee Conference - Senator Kate Lundy
Senator Kate Lundy, Parliamentary Secretary for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs, addresses the 2011 Refugee Conference at UNSW.
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Eileen Pittaway: Innocent victims, Illegal migrants or political pawns?
Refugees escape from persecution, conflict, death threats and
torture. The majority of refugee women and girls survive rape and sexual
abuse in transit and in camps. Boys and girls are taken as child
soldiers. Refugee camps are dangerous and services are inadequate to
fulfil basic needs. Despite this, refugees fight to maintain their
dignity, their families, their communities and their culture. They do
this in the face of often insurmountable problems. Refugees bring an
enormous and diverse range of skills and capacities to camps and on
resettlement, but the structure of service provision often ‘de
capacitates’ rather than recognise this. The rhetoric of self
sustainability is empty when refugees are denied the right to work, and
the most fundamental civil rights.
Little of the refugee experience is known in the developed world. The
discourse of “border protection” silences their voices. Instead of
compassion, and the recognition of their rights they are treated as
pariahs, as illegal immigrants. We will examine the implication of this
for countries such as Australia. We will suggest how this can be
reversed so that refugee rights and dignity can be upheld and host
countries can benefit from the skills and capacities which refugees
bring with them. We will discuss how the work of the UNSW Centre for
Refugee research is contributing to this change. -
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Bolivia: Leaving the land
Climate induced migration is not just happening to low-lying islands.
The catastrophic drought means thousands of Bolivians are simply
walking away from their homes and land for cities already suffering from
water shortages.
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2011 Refugee Conference - Conference Opening
Opening of the 2011 UNSW Refugee Conference - "Looking to the Future, Learning from the Past".
Host: Dr Eileen Pittaway, Centre for Refugee Research, UNSW
Welcome to Country: Dennis Golding, Nura Gili, UNSW
Welcome to UNSW: Professor James Donald,
Dean Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
Welcome to UNHCR Commemorations: Richard Towle, Regional Representative UNHCR Regional Office for Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and the Pacific
Welcome to the Refugee Conference 2011: John Gibson, President of the Board,
Refugee Council of Australia