Why Should we Listen to Her?
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The refugee situation is one of the burning issues in today's world, where refugees make up more than 1 per cent of the whole population.1 Moreover, a great majority – of over 80 per cent – of refugees are women and their dependent children. The world's refugee situation is thus strongly manifested in and lived through the gendered experiences of women refugees. Yet, even in the face of the telling figures there however exists a striking disparity between the reality of the refugee situation and the business-as-usual of the refugee regime – refugee women's experiences are deemed to fundamental otherness. According to UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), ‘(H)istorically, the refugee definition has been interpreted through a framework of male experiences’. […]The refugee problem in Africa seems to be escalating despite the decrease in the number of refugees as shown in UNHCR statistics. The cross-border movements of refugees, internal displacement, failed reintegration and resettlement of returnees all contribute to this phenomenon. Added to this is the seemingly stagnant refugee protection regime as compared to the changing nature of refugee problems and the changed priorities of the present-day African state.
Phenomenon
Internally displaced person
Forced migration
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Conditions for the world’s refugees and asylum seekers have seen important changes over the past 25 years. In the global North, states have become increasingly reluctant to allow access for asylum seekers and have introduced an alarming range of policies and programmes intended to prevent arrivals, punish those who manage to claim asylum, and contain refugees in their regions of origin. Australia’s policy of mandatory detention and extraterritorialization since the early 2000s is but one example of these policies. Partially as a consequence of these policies, more than 80 per cent of refugees are now found in states in the global South, with the average duration of a refugee situation now approaching 20 years—double what it was in the early 1990s. Many refugee-hosting states in the global South, like Kenya, respond to the prolonged presence of refugees by enforcing encampment policies, themselves seeking to contain refugees on the periphery of the state. An increasing number of refugees seek to escape this reality, and undertake perilous journeys to find protection and solutions elsewhere, either in urban areas, other states in the region, or onwards to the global North.
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This is the second in a series of three articles
People who are seeking asylum are not a homogeneous population. Coming from different countries and cultures, they have had, in their own and other countries, a wide range of experiences that may affect their health and nutritional state. In the United Kingdom they face the effects of poverty, dependence, and lack of cohesive social support.1 All these factors undermine both physical and mental health. Additionally, racial discrimination can result in inequalities in health and have an impact on opportunities in and quality of life.2
Refugees' experiences also shape their acceptance and expectations of health care in the United Kingdom.3 Those from countries with no well developed primary healthcare system may expect hospital referral for conditions that in Britain are treated in primary care. This can lead to disappointment for refugees and irritation for health workers, who may also feel overwhelmed by the many and varying needs of asylum seekers, some of which are non-medical but nevertheless affect health. Addressing even a few of these needs may be of considerable benefit.
Previous studies in the United Kingdom have found that one in six refugees has a physical health problem severe enough to affect their life and two thirds have experienced anxiety or depression. 4 5 Disentangling the web of history, symptoms—which may be minimised or exaggerated for a range of reasons—and current coping mechanisms requires patience and often several sessions. Medication should be as simple as possible.
#### Summary points
Asylum seekers and refugees are not a homogeneous group of people, and have differing experiences and expectations of health and of health care
Symptoms of psychological distress are common, but do not necessarily signify mental illness
Trained interpreters or advocates, rather than family members or friends, should be used wherever possible …
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Forced migration has become a major world problem, with increasing armed conflict between and within nations leading to vast numbers of refugees, asylum seekers and displaced persons. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR, 2007) identified 32.9 million people as 'of concern' at the end of 2006. Roughly half of the refugee population is female, although the proportions vary greatly depending on the refugee situation, region of asylum and age distribution. Information on the age breakdown is incomplete but suggests that 45% of refugees are children under the age of 18; 11% of them being under the age of five (UNHCR, 2007).
Forced migration
Asylum seeker
Displaced person
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Currently there are 59.5million people forcibly displaced worldwide as a result of conflict, human rights violations, generalised violence or persecution. Of these, 19.5million are refugees and 1.8million are asylum seekers. Each year Australia accepts 13750 refugees through the offshore Humanitarian program, and in 2016 that number will almost double with the addition of 12000 refugees from Syria and Iraq. Many refugees have complex medical needs and have reached Australia after a difficult journey, often involving time in refugee camps and exposure to traumatic events including physical hardship and illness. Refugees often come from parts of the world where parasitic and tropical infectious diseases are prevalent and untreated. This article provides a review of enteric helminth infections in refugees, including asylum seekers and those from a refugee-like background.
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This paper explores Canada’s response, through our Refugee and Humanitarian Resettlement Program, to developments in international refugee policy and will ask how Canada’s resettlement program could be used more strategically in the future so as to meaningfully contribute to resolving protracted refugee situations globally while ensuring the successful integration of refugees from these situations.
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The refugee situation is one of the burning issues in today's world, where refugees make up more than 1 per cent of the whole population.1 Moreover, a great majority – of over 80 per cent – of refugees are women and their dependent children. The world's refugee situation is thus strongly manifested in and lived through the gendered experiences of women refugees. Yet, even in the face of the telling figures there however exists a striking disparity between the reality of the refugee situation and the business-as-usual of the refugee regime – refugee women's experiences are deemed to fundamental otherness. According to UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), ‘(H)istorically, the refugee definition has been interpreted through a framework of male experiences’. […]
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Increasing backlogs are preventing individual refugee status determination systems from functioning, even in some of the most well developed asylum systems. This means that asylum seekers must spend the first, most vulnerable, years in their countries of refuge without having been individually adjudicated to meet the international refugee definition. Decline in individual refugee status determination hastens an overall decline in refugee rights. It is essential to find means of maintaining viable individual refugee status determination systems, even as large refugee movements seem to make this impractical.
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The nationally-recognized Susquehanna
Chorale will delight audiences of all
ages with a diverse mix of classic and
contemporary pieces. The ChoraleAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂA¢AÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂs
performances have been described
as AÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂA¢AÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂemotionally unfiltered, honest
music making, successful in their
aim to make the audience feel,
to be moved, to be part of the
performance - and all this while
working at an extremely high
musical level.AÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂA¢AÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂAÂA Experience choral
singing that will take you to new
heights!
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This short paper calls for greater awareness of disabled refugees and asylum seekers living in Britain. Currently, policy makers, many refugee communities and the disability movement fail to consider disabled refugees and asylum seekers, perhaps because they constitute a minority about whom data are rarely available. Focussing on the particular combination of circumstances affecting disabled refugees and asylum seekers, this paper presents recent changes in support arrangements for refugees and asylum seekers. The paper also calls for greater involvement in refugee issues by the disability movement.
Disabled people
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