Citation

‘I had to do something. I couldn’t do nothing!’: Citizen action in support of asylum seekers in Australia 2001-2006

Author:
Gosden, Diane
Year:
2012

This thesis is an examination of social action opposed to particular Australian government policies. The policies concerned are those
affecting people seeking asylum without authorised entry documents. The period examined is from 2001 to 2006. It is argued that the
social action contributed to the achievement of shifts in public opinion and policy during this period.
The context in which this local action is examined is the international system of asylum, and the responses of developed countries to
flows of incoming asylum seekers. Political rhetoric has often demonised those seeking asylum, and the term ‘asylum seeker’
increasingly has negative connotations for many people in developed countries. At the same time, groups of people in asylum
destination countries such as Australia, have also responded with support and assistance for asylum seekers.
Using ethnographic methodology and drawing on theories from refugee studies, and collective action and social movement theory, this
thesis explores the nature of this particular response. Interviews were conducted with more than 90 people from across Australia, who
opposed government policies which criminalised and excluded asylum seekers. In contrast, these people were involved in advocacy and
support. Analysis of these interviews reveals the complex interactions amongst and between asylum seekers, advocates, activists, and
government. Motivations and emotions of social action are examined in the study, as are tensions over objectives and strategies, and
the construction of collective experience and identity.
The analysis illustrates the impact of the activism of the asylum seekers themselves upon the social action in terms of interactions,
relationships and joint actions between asylum seekers and citizens. The thesis finds practical and symbolic resonances within the
social action, which transcend the particularity of the Australian situation. From this, the potential for a human-to-human dimension
of common humanity to build connections between privileged and excluded peoples, is theorised. Through this exploration,
contributions are made to both refugee studies literature and to collective action and social movement literature. The research
illustrates the impact upon both areas, of the wider structures of globalisation. Conversely, it also illustrates the way in which local
action can provide innovative paths for wider social actions and visions.