I have been thinking and writing about Australia’s asylum seeker policies
for over 25 years. When I started back in 1991, the asylum seeker policies
now espoused by the major parties would have been inconceivable to
most politicians on all sides – but here we are. Explaining how we got here
requires me to start further back in time than 1991. It requires me to start,
in fact, with the drafting of the founding document of the Australian
political and legal system – the Constitution. From there, I consider
two key features of contemporary asylum seeker policy – mandatory
detention, which was introduced in 1992, and offshore processing, which
was initially introduced in 2001. I end the chapter by reflecting on the
lessons of our past for our future.
History
School
La Trobe Law School
Publication Date
2021-02-04
Book Title
Refugee journeys: histories of resettlement, representation and resistance
Editors
Silverstein J
Stevens R
Publisher
Australian National University Press
Place of publication
Acton, ACT
Pagination
18p. (p. 193-210)
ISBN-13
9781760464196
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