Belonging in the land down under: Black Africans in Australia

Black African migrants have recently become a visible presence in Australia. Many arrived through the humanitarian resettlement programme, but far greater numbers come through the “skilled stream”. This paper explores recent research into these populations to tease out how material, social and exist...

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Veröffentlicht in:International migration 2023-02, Vol.61 (1), p.23-38
1. Verfasser: Fozdar, Farida
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description Black African migrants have recently become a visible presence in Australia. Many arrived through the humanitarian resettlement programme, but far greater numbers come through the “skilled stream”. This paper explores recent research into these populations to tease out how material, social and existential elements of settlement intersect with belonging. As a heuristic, it uses Ager and Strang's ten markers and means of integration: material aspects (employment, housing, education and health); social connections internally and externally; facilitators (language, cultural knowledge, safety, stability); and rights and citizenship. A range of challenges to positive settlement and integration are identified, using these domains. However, Australian research has focused almost exclusively on African migrants of refugee background, with most sampling South Sudanese, making generalization impossible, even dangerous. The urgent need for research using wider samples, and more large‐scale quantitative work, is called for and a range of policy recommendations suggested.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; Wiley Blackwell Single Titles; Political science complete
subjects Black people
Citizenship
Civil rights
Connectedness
Employment
Health education
Heuristic
Housing
Humanitarianism
Migrants
Refugees
Relocation
Resettlement
Sampling
title Belonging in the land down under: Black Africans in Australia
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