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ID138161
Title ProperWelcome to Australia? A reappraisal of the Fraser government's approach to refugees, 1975–83
LanguageENG
AuthorStats, Katrina
Summary / Abstract (Note)The Fraser government's response to the Indo-Chinese refugee crisis and the presentation, for the first time, of asylum-seekers arriving in Australia by boat is almost universally acclaimed as having been proactive, generous and humanitarian in spirit—the antithesis of both the preceding Whitlam Labor government and subsequent governments, particularly since 2001. Adopting a policy of ‘forward selection’ of refugees from camps in South-East Asia, the Fraser government was able to stem the flow of boats and oversaw the relatively uncontroversial resettlement of nearly 70,000 Indo-Chinese. However, the author argues that this was not the brave and principled course of action for which Fraser and his immigration ministers are regularly fêted, but rather a delayed response that was motivated by fear and desperation rather than pure humanitarian intent. The celebrated outcomes of Fraser's policies belie the self-interested way in which they were constructed and neglect the fact that the government did not act until it was forced. Fraser's policies were neither a departure from the past nor the antithesis of current polices; to the contrary, they were the seeds of the contemporary Australian model of asylum.
`In' analytical NoteAustralian Journal of International Affairs Vol. 69, No.1; Feb 2015: p.69-87
Journal SourceAustralian Journal of International Affairs Vol: 69 No 1
Key WordsAsylum Seekers ;  Malcolm Fraser ;  Australian Refugee Policy ;  Indo - Chinese Refugee Crisis


 
 
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