Factors Shaping the Lived Experience of Resettlement for Former Refugees in Regional Australia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Setting
2.2. Research Design
2.3. Participants
2.4. Procedure
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. English Language Proficiency
“I believe that language is the most important thing that we need to get, to be able to settle.”—former refugee participant—Afghan men’s group
“It’s hard to find a job…the language barrier that…stop us getting that work.”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
“…not enough recognition of what barriers these kids are hitting with English…they get put into a class and they basically have to swim…”—ESP participant
“…if you can’t speak your issues then you won’t access the service….”—ESP participant
“We had an incident, not, not long ago, where one of my youth students, had an accident and he hurt himself… “what did you do, did you call an ambulance?”, “no”, “why not?”, “ …we didn’t have the language to be able to call an ambulance” ….”—ESP participant
“…where people who settle here have an incredible guilt about their family members back home, they’ve left behind…brings incredible feelings for people here, responsibility and guilt.”—ESP participant
“[the] impact of what we would call trauma on their cognitive abilities and the ability to concentrate and focus and, and actually learn …”—ESP participant
“Since they had no education when they were in Iran/Afghanistan, so it was difficult for them to start English here.”—former refugee participant—Afghan women’s friendship group (spoken through BSW)
“…adults really seem to struggle. Certainly the ones, the former refugees that were literate in their own language seemed to grasp it better…”—ESP participant
“…talking in English, if we forget Nepali, so our children, our brothers, sisters, they will won’t be honouring our tradition, culture…So, we need to preserve our language, culture, tradition…”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
“…if your children don’t speak Farsi, if your children don’t have knowledge of your culture, I don’t think that’s going to go down very well when they go back for holidays…”—ESP participant
“…students get, ‘here is a printed paper’ every day…we never go back and read what we have studied before so it’s a daily basis teaching...”—ESP participant
“…with [name of charity organisation]…when you finish the first 800 h…you have to have a break of 6 months before you can attend another 800 h. So he said…‘when I came back to get another 800 h I have to start from the start’.”—ESP participant
“…the Australian government…tendered out to the cheapest tender… language classes which [education provider] were running originally and then [employment services provider] won the tender for, they were not prepared…people say, “I’ve been here seven months and I have not had an English class yet, I want to be a member of this community, how can I do that without speaking English?”—ESP participant
3.2. Employment, Education, and Housing Environments and Opportunities
“…they are all employed. People are working even those who have never been to school…those who are not working, there’re probably only 2 people that I know they are not working out of the whole Sudanese community so that’s quite a big success…”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
“…things like fruit picking… seasonal work…that they enjoy doing, that’s familiar to them, because a lot of them come from rural areas as well, originally.”—ESP participant
“…they’re conscientious workers, they’ve probably worked their backside off than most Australians, but because of that prejudice they don’t get a chance.”—ESP participant
“…they changed their name to western names and they call them for interview so when they went, the people were surprised you know. So that was just to prove that there are forms of discrimination…”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
“I studied architecture, I believe it’s a universal standard studying architecture…but I found it difficult….”—former refugee participant—Afghan men’s group
“…state and the federal organizations have to break the ice. They should be the ones that should start employing Africans. When you go to Melbourne, you go to Centrelink, you got a lot of Africans working there. … put more emphasis on giving the incentives to these community organizations and businesses to be able to employ people from refugee migrants….”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
“…do something about functional English…if I came here, I was involved in a program that was working with people from the regional areas… focused in learning English using…everything that has to do with farming… learning was connected directly with their occupation.”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
“I am very happy living in Australia, because the women, refugee in Iran and others can’t study in a school because the government in Iran they say “you are a refugee, you can’t study in here…””—former refugee participant—Youth Advisory Network
“…if I can study here then I can become good person and also, I can help to other my community for example if I’m doctor in future I would help my community or Australian people, I will be very happy to help them…”—former refugee participant—Youth Advisory Network
“My life is really different here so when I was in Iran there wasn’t any school, there wasn’t any opportunity to learn… I’m going to school and learning, so feeling really happy.”—former refugee participant—Afghan women’s friendship group
“…she’s been very busy with raising her children and… she has to start it all [English learning] over again, after these years.”—former refugee participant—Afghan women’s friendship group (spoken through BSW)
“…kids who are going to college and high school they get treated the same way. For example he said his cousin been assessed based on her age, they said ‘you are 15 so you should go grade 10 or 11′ for example, and he said all of a sudden she found herself in an education system that she had no idea before, she’d never studied for example geography before, and she had to compete with other student who been in the system for all their life…”—former refugee participant—Afghan men’s group (spoken through BSW)
“… if you’re understanding where the behaviours are coming from and you know what makes them feel safe… [you] create a welcoming environment in a classroom…”—ESP participant
“…if you’ve got a classroom of 30, you might have 5 refugee kids that you probably got 15 to 20 kids in there who have experience some kind of trauma so we’re not just talking about you know the refugee kids’ population…”—ESP participant
“A lot of the schools are now are including cultural…education to the rest of the class, including things like ‘hey, it’s Afghan new year let’s do this in the classroom for the Afghan kids and everyone join in and learn about that’… make people feel more comfortable and welcome…”—ESP participant
“… [they] just want to be homeowners. I think that’s the huge goal, for a lot of them, they want to own their own their little piece of Australia, and they want to own a home”—ESP participant
“…might be two or three families that live together in a household so they’re pooling their money because they’re a collectivist community, that’s what they’re used to doing, so that’s how they can save money…”—ESP participant
“…many people came with their families, big families from 4, 5 to 8, will struggle to get a house. You see, they apply for houses and people for some reasons they thought they will not, they probably destroy the houses or there are many other things that house owners think of…sometimes they are stuck, they cannot, because they find it difficult to find a house themselves because of a lot of things that the owners of the house and if you are competing with a local person here…”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
“…they can’t read and write, you know, they don’t know what is the information they got from real estate so they live for, you know, until 12 months, they haven’t find, you know, new house or, so they have to move, you know, within maybe 2 ah 14 days and they really struggling…”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
“…it’s really really important that they feel they’re in the safe… they’re all buying up Newnham [Launceston suburb], unfortunately they’ve pushed the prices sky high on each other, but anyway, because that’s where they feel safe, it’s a safety, a feeling of safety there because their community is there…”—ESP participant
“…example of a young man… arrived here when he was about 21…back in his country he had been working in a construction job since he was about 15 which enabled him to earn some money and have his own life and his own social all of that kind of stuff and it also enabled him to escape some of the violence and not very nice things that were happening in his home…his family all got given their refugee status together as a family and sent here and were given a house and so now he is back in living with his family…They don’t particularly like each other. They don’t have…financial means to move out separately. They don’t have you know he doesn’t have friends here who he could move out with or spend all of the time with to avoid being at home...”—ESP participant
3.3. Health Status and Access to Health Services
“…we always used to in the clinic, go out of our way to learn the words for hello, goodbye, really simple…And they used to love that… simple things like that, make them feel really welcome.”—ESP participant
“…many of the former refugees with mental health illnesses, probably all tied up with, you know, experiences they had before they came to Australia….”—ESP participant
“…there are still a lot of intergenerational trauma stuff that comes from where parents not being in a safe enough space… So not being able to form a secure attachment because they were constantly worried about what might happen or where the next meal is going to come from…”—ESP participant
“We have to use one of our accredited interpreters, and that’s both to protect the children, because I know that can be very traumatic…”—ESP participant
“…with the more recent arrivals in the last few years, we’ve seen these issues like long-term issues come through. Um, things that people require ongoing, chronic health conditions that really affect people’s lives and most of them need a carer as well, so I think that that’s a huge issue.”—ESP participant
“…from people who have experienced many, many, many years of refugee camp…Bhutanese, Burmese communities, that the older people in their communities, their health is really, really poor, there’s lots of diabetes, respiratory issues, somatic body issues, arthritis, yeah, so quite debilitating health issues…”—ESP participant
“…in the longer term…health will be much better because they have access to all these services that are free, whereas in Nepal where the Bhutanese refugees come from… services just weren’t available...”—ESP participant
“…in my country, you know, growing up in the countryside there is no doctor, there’s no nurse so we have to walk, four hours, six hours. So, in comparison…here is really, really good …”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
“…there’s a lack of understanding of the different ways that mental health might be treated or might be addressed or might be understood other than just to depression or anxiety.”—ESP participant
“…when they were in the camp they went to a doctor and said, “I’m sad” and the doctor said “cool, here take these tablets, um it will fix it” and they get here…and they say, “I don’t want counselling, I just want tablets.””—ESP participant
“…people are treated differently, and they are seen as differently and, in this system, here, in this hospital system… I see so many human rights violations, for instance, not getting an interpreter…so I think there’s a continuum of racism, and I think there is systemic racism…”—ESP participant
“…because they cannot speak English with just brush them off when they say something, you know the little things that people face…they don’t really want to go there again…”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
3.4. Quality of Broader Social Life
“…community is the backbone so that when there is a, someone is in trouble, like they should be cooperative, understand the problem…those who have arrived before more than 4, 5 years like here, we are from the same community and also our language is the same…”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
“…quite often it is the community leaders who will be the first point of call for pretty much anything.”—ESP participant
“When I arrived here, when my family arrived here, we had 10 people that came to the airport just to say welcome. So, it impressed us a lot, because there was a lot of disrespect and discrimination in Iran… happy with the people’s behaviours and manners here...”—former refugee participant—Afghan women’s friendship group
“…they’ll take a group of women who are into sewing, or spinning or weaving…and they’ll invite them along to share…And you know end up working together, or cooking.”—ESP participant
“…I cannot think of any other organisation in this city provided help the way MRC does...”—ESP participant
“…we shouldn’t be forgetting the help of the Centrelink that we’ve received and the settlement journey.”—former refugee participant—Afghan men’s group
“…the church was also something that is very important to me that helped me to settle…”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
“…we had neighbours, but we hardly see them or even if they are outside…they hardly talk to us…for us it was quite difficult because we lived in smaller communities and everybody knew everybody…”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
“…especially the Afghan community have…very specific gender roles… it’s very instilled. Over time though things tend to relax a bit more.”—ESP participant
“…men found it very difficult to lose the position in the family where they make the decisions…”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
“…young people are adapting to Australian culture differently and parents are really worried that they will lose things that their former culture and young people having to do that balance over “what is really important to me in my home culture what kind of things do I wanna keep”...”—ESP participant
“…young people feel a bit like a utility, so they are the ones that have to realize all of their parents’ expectations for coming…they have to really well at school and become doctors… it’s kind of their job to take the opportunities that Australia offers but also to carry on their cultural traditions...”—ESP participant—ESP participant
“Because they don’t know the story why we migrated here. That’s the main problem.”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
“…in every country, in every place, there are few people who may think differently from other people. Some people think we’ve come to take their jobs…because we have jobs and they don’t…”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
“…differences in cultural practices and religious practices between his religion and culture and Australia’s existing religion and culture…”—former refugee participant—Afghan men’s group (spoken through BSW)
“…a tendency in humans to mistrust things that are different and people that are different…prejudice largely fueled by the media of course…especially place like Tasmania which is very, Anglo, very insular…”—ESP participant
“…people have seen on the media that a single Muslim man has, you know, blown up this…you get this diatribe about you know, they shouldn’t be allowed to come to Tasmania, they’re all terrorists and, you know…”—ESP participant
“…fear mongering against Muslims for instance, and this is what I get scared about here, about people coming here…I just get a bit scared for them, because there have been racist attacks here, violent, racist attacks…”—ESP participant
“…some neighbours they start bullying from their place. Where I live…there are 2 boys, 19 and 20 years…and they start bullying or saying something, swearing…”—former refugee participant—adult community leader
“…comparing the experience of a migrant first in Iran and a migrant person in Australia, was incomparable. That the level of discrimination they faced in Iran luckily wasn’t here in Australian society…”—former refugee participant—Afghan men’s group (spoken through BSW)
“Even though the bogan at the supermarket might give them a filthy look or you know tell them to go back to where they came from…that’s great compared to where they’ve come from…”—ESP participant
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. Participants | Group Membership | Background | Bicultural Support Worker Utilised? (Yes/No) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Group 1 | 5 | Women’s Friendship | Afghan | Yes |
Group 2 | 4 | Women’s Friendship | Afghan | Yes |
Group 3 | 3 | Leader’s Group | Bhutanese | Yes |
Group 4 | 4 | Men’s Group | Afghan | Yes |
Group 5 | 6 | Youth Advisory Network | Afghan, Iranian | Yes |
Group 6 | 2 | Essential Service Provider (ESP) | Launceston Library | No |
Interview 1 | 1 | ESP | Centrelink | No |
Interview 2 | 1 | ESP | Launceston General Hospital (LGH) | No |
Interview 3 | 1 | ESP | LGH | No |
Interview 4 | 1 | Leader’s Group | Sudanese | No |
Interview 5 | 1 | ESP | Phoenix Centre (Counselling service) | No |
Interview 6 | 1 | Leader’s Group | Burmese | No |
Interview 7 | 1 | Leader’s Group | Sierra Leonean | No |
Questions for Former Refugees |
1. How have you found resettling in Launceston? |
2. Do you feel a sense of belonging in Launceston? Does Launceston feel like home to you? |
3. How has life been for you since you’ve resettled? How has it been for family and friends here? |
4. What has helped you the most settling into your life in Launceston? What has helped you the least? |
Questions for ESPs |
1. What do you think are the overall experiences for former refugees who have resettled in Launceston? |
2. What do you think are the three biggest resettlement benefits encountered by former refugees in Launceston? What are the three biggest barriers to resettlement? |
3. From your work with former refugees in Launceston, what sort of supports have you found former refugees use? What sort of things make former refugees feel welcome/not so welcome, upon arrival? |
4. How has learning a new language been experienced by the former refugees you work with? What experiences have you noticed for family members who are required to act as interpreters? |
© 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Smith, L.; Hoang, H.; Reynish, T.; McLeod, K.; Hannah, C.; Auckland, S.; Slewa-Younan, S.; Mond, J. Factors Shaping the Lived Experience of Resettlement for Former Refugees in Regional Australia. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 501. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17020501
Smith L, Hoang H, Reynish T, McLeod K, Hannah C, Auckland S, Slewa-Younan S, Mond J. Factors Shaping the Lived Experience of Resettlement for Former Refugees in Regional Australia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(2):501. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17020501
Chicago/Turabian StyleSmith, Laura, Ha Hoang, Tamara Reynish, Kim McLeod, Chona Hannah, Stuart Auckland, Shameran Slewa-Younan, and Jonathan Mond. 2020. "Factors Shaping the Lived Experience of Resettlement for Former Refugees in Regional Australia" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 2: 501. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17020501
APA StyleSmith, L., Hoang, H., Reynish, T., McLeod, K., Hannah, C., Auckland, S., Slewa-Younan, S., & Mond, J. (2020). Factors Shaping the Lived Experience of Resettlement for Former Refugees in Regional Australia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(2), 501. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17020501