Refuge Refugees, Racism, and the Media (original) (raw)

Racism and Canadian Refugee Policy

Refuge: Canada's Journal on Refugees, 1999

This articles takes up Anthony Richmond's foundational depiction of the global apartheid regime in relation to refugee policy in the Canadian context. After a brief review of Canada's historical record, this article examines the defining elements of the Canadian refugee program, the impact of selected Supreme Court of Canada decisions in the area of refugee law as well as the current agenda for legislative and policy reform. The article highlights the ways in which Canadian law and policy fail to deliver justice and equality for refugees and asylum seekers.

Refuge28-2-Canada’s Periodical on Refugees

2013

Increasingly refugees live in urban areas—usually in slums impacted by unemployment, poverty, overcrowding and inadequate infrastructure. Host governments oft en restrict refugees’ access to the labor market, access that can be further impeded by language barriers, arbitrary fees, and discrimination. UNHCR and its partners are seldom equipped to understand and navigate the complex urban economic environment in order to create opportunities for refugees in these settings. Based on assessments undertaken in 2010 and 2011 in Kampala, New Delhi and Johannesburg, research fi ndings indicate that refugees in urban areas adopt a variety of economic coping strategies, many of which place them at risk, and that new approaches and diff erent partnerships are needed for the design and implementation of economic programs. Th is paper presents fi ndings from the assessments and lays out strategies to address the challenges confronting urban refugees’ ability to enter and compete in the labor mar...

The Syrian Refugee Crisis in Canadian Media

2021

, of the coverage of the Canadian resettlement effort of Syrian refugees, including representation of the refugees and the Canadian government and public. The analysis is informed by theories of orientalism, neocolonialism, neoliberalism, and feminism.

Refugees and the Media: Local and Global Perspectives (Uddin & Arif)

Palgrave Macmillan, 2024

Media and refugees rhetorically live together and practically complement each other. Yet, it involves plenty of hidden political agendas and ethical issues in the (re)presentation of refugees in media. This collection raises questions: Should the media stand by refugees or maintain deliberate ‘neutrality’? Should the media dehumanize the refugees further in their humanitarian conditions? Are the media entitled to publish photographs of refugees without informed consent? Should the media stand by the state being responsible for generating refugee crisis or should the state be accountable for rendering its people refugees? What effective roles can media play in redressing the refugee ‘crisis’ in the world? The book brings together scholars across disciplines and continents who reflect on the nexus between media and refugees in contexts around the world. It engages in cutting-edge methodological and theoretical discussions and challenges regarding the reciprocal engagement between media and refugees from both local and global perspectives.

(2016) Refugees: Canadian Encyclopedia

Refugees and asylum seekers flee their countries in hopes of safety abroad. Governed by the 1951 UN Refugee Convention, refugee status is a matter of both international and domestic law. Historically, Canada has assisted many refugees from all over the world. However, human migration is a complex phenomenon, and Canada's refugee policies are also not immune to the influence of political and popular opinion.

Refugees and the Insecure Nation: Managing Forced Migration in Canada

Conference Report & Summary of Conference Proceedings, June 15-18, 2008 at York University, Toronto, Canada This was the inaugural Conference of the Canadian Association for Refugee and Forced Migration Studies (CARFMS). The event was hosted by the Centre for Refugee Studies, York University.

no. 8/3 | October 2022 The “good” refugee is welcome: On the role of racism, sexism, and victimhood when fleeing from war

iscourseNet Collaborative Working Paper Series, 2022

Ukrainian refugees arriving in Germany in 2022 dredge up memories of Syrian refugee immigration in 2015. This paper examines whether there is a stereotype of a “good refugee” who is welcome to the EU as it studies the coverage of Syrian and Ukrainian refugees by a major German daily newspaper from a sociology of knowledge approach. As racist and sexist prejudices prevail, the media clearly favors Caucasian, non-Muslim women accompanied by young children as the “good” refugee who is welcome.

The 'Good' and 'Bad' Refugees? Imagined Refugeehood(s) in the Media Coverage of the Migration Crisis, Journal of Identity and Migration Studies, Volume 10, number 2, Autumn/Winter 2016, University of Oradea Publishing House.

This text is an attempt to analyze a particular, normative aspect of the media narrative about refugees during the recent migration crisis in Europe. It looks at the substantive semantic distance between the 'good' or 'real' refugees presented in some media outlets and the definition of a refugee under international law. This difference is later explained by a particular kind of exposure to the events of the refugee crisis -a 'mediated experience', and by the existence of a normative 'refugee archetype'. I look at images representing refugees through the lenses of John B. concept of opposition between lived and mediated experience -the figures of 'bad' and 'good' refugees are seen as belonging to the order of mediated experience, therefore, as argued by Thomson, impersonal and dispersed in time and space. Finally, I refer to the concept of a refugee as a 'universal humanitarian subject' -an apolitical and dehistoricized figure, reduced to the role of aid beneficiary which serves me to explain the ambiguity of representations of refugees and their dependence on political interests.