Loading...

Direct Provision

Asylum, The Academy and Activism

by Jacqui O'Riordan (Volume editor) Mike FitzGibbon (Volume editor)
©2020 Edited Collection XII, 486 Pages

Summary

This book examines approaches and responses to working with the asylum-seeking, refugee and migrant communities in Ireland. Through their experiences, analyses and activist accounts, contributors name direct provision as a system that facilitates the marginalization and dehumanizing of people. In making visible some of the undocumented challenges to direct provision, the co-operation and engagement between local and migrant communities, and the very real and moving experiences of living in such conditions, this publication forms a part of the ongoing challenge to direct provision. It calls for a reconsideration of the infallibility of the reductionist-dominant narrative that reduces responsibility to care and protect human life, to narrow economic considerations, and calls on the State to recognize its duty of care in its fullest conceptualization. While analysing through the lens of care, the reductionist and repressive State policies and practices are revealed. Most emphasis is placed on the reactions and resilience of the asylum–seeking community, through their numerous acts of resistance, supported by a significant cohort of friends and activists within and outwith the direct provision system.

Table Of Contents

  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • About the author
  • About the book
  • This eBook can be cited
  • Contents
  • List of Illustrations
  • Introduction: The Uncaring State (Jacqui O’Riordan)
  • Part I Structures and Policy on Asylum in the Irish State
  • 1 Concepts of Asylum and Refugee Status: Irish Approaches to Date (Piaras Mac Éinrí)
  • 2 State Security versus Human Security: Asylum Policy and Its Discontents (Claire Dorrity)
  • 3 Who’s Afraid of the Irish State? (Michael Blaney)
  • 4 Activist Beginnings: Local and National Campaigns and Initiatives (Joe Moore)
  • 5 The McMahon Working Group (Daniel Delaney and Megan Killian)
  • Part II Challenging Institutions: Activist Perspectives
  • 6 Racisms, State Racism and Resistance (Joe Moore)
  • 7 The Power of Organizing from Within: Lucky’s Life and Journey in Direct Provision and KRAC Protest (Lucky Khambule)
  • 8 My Experience of Living in Direct Provision (Florence Eriamiantoe)
  • 9 Beyond Ribbon Cutting: A Personal Reflection (Gertrude Cotter)
  • 10 The Liberation Protest (Tess O)
  • Part III Childhoods Lived in Direct Provision: Providing Alternative Spaces and Places Where Children Are Enabled to Flourish
  • 11 Children without Childhoods: The Experiences of Children in Direct Provision in Ireland (Annie Cummins)
  • 12 The Nature and Consequences of Institutionalizing Families (Nomaxabixo Princess Maye)
  • 13 My Journey into Direct Provision (Temmy A)
  • 14 Children’s Play in a Hostile Environment (Jacqui O’Riordan, Deirdre Horgan and Shirley Martin)
  • 15 Controlled: Raising Children and Living under Surveillance (Kaffy)
  • 16 The Psychosocial Wellbeing of Asylum Seeking Children Living in Direct Provision Centres in Ireland (Naomi Masheti)
  • Part IV Women and Men as Gendered Adults Living in Direct Provision
  • 17 Women’s Migratory Journeys: Hope and Pain – From Home to DP to Home Again (Ciara Burke)
  • 18 Liminality in the Direct Provisional System: Living under Extreme Rules and Conditions (Amin Sharifi Isaloo)
  • 19 ‘Being Made Different’: Inactivity, Dependency and Emasculation in Direct Provision (Dominic Hewson)
  • 20 Invisible: Disabled Child and Adult Asylum Seekers Living in Direct Provision (Keelin Barry)
  • 21 Struggles of Living in Direct Provision (Caroline Muthoni Munyi)
  • 22 Leaving, Arriving, Beginning: Residents’ Stories of Coming (Ellen, Jessie Nswazi, Natalie)
  • 23 Living under the Threat of Deportation: Activist Counter-Deportation Strategies in a Changing Environment (Joe Moore)
  • 24 Direct Provision Diary 2007–2009 (Vukasin Nedeljkovic)
  • 25 Resisting: Poems (Melanie Marks and Hassan Ali Hassan)
  • Part V Realizing Human and Social Potential: Initiatives, Experiences, Resistances
  • 26 From Seeking Asylum to Serving Knowledge: The Journey of an Asylum Seeker in Ireland (Niyi Kolawole)
  • 27 My Journey through Higher Education: A Struggle for Self-Improvement to Contribute to Irish Society (Pako Mokobo)
  • 28 Becoming a University of Sanctuary: Making UCC a Welcome Place for Asylum Seekers (Mike FitzGibbon)
  • 29 The Sanctuary Runner Stories (Graham Clifford, Yolanda Mhene and Justine Looney)
  • 30 Ordinary (Vera Stojanovic)
  • 31 Anti-Deportation Ireland: Emergence, Growth and Actions (Joe Moore)
  • 32 Applied Improvisation and Visual Methodologies in Priority Identification with Asylum Seeker Women in Direct Provision (Angela Veale, Sarah Robinson, Naomi Masheti, and Barbara Tint)
  • 33 The Journey to Me: Exploring Identity and Belonging through Creativity with Children Living in Direct Provision in Cork (Kathy D’Arcy)
  • 34 Creative Agency: Enabling Cultural Participation for Young Asylum Seekers, Refugees and Migrants in a Museum Context (Fiona Kearney and Tadhg Crowley)
  • Conclusions: Reduction, Repression, Reaction, Resistance (Mike FitzGibbon)
  • Index

cover

Bibliographic information published by Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek.
Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche National-
bibliografie; detailed bibliographic data is available on the Internet at
http://dnb.d-nb.de.

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

Library of Congress Control Number: 2020910872

Cover design: Peter Lang.

© Peter Lang AG 2020

Published by Peter Lang Ltd, International Academic Publishers,
52 St Giles, Oxford, OX1 3LU, United Kingdom
oxford@peterlang.com, www.peterlang.com

Jacqui O’Riordan, and Mike FitzGibbon have asserted their right under the
Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identified as Editors of this Work.
Publication supported by the Research Publication Fund of the College of Arts,
Celtic Studies and Social Sciences, University College Cork.

All rights reserved.

This publication has been peer reviewed.

About the author

Jacqui O’Riordan is a lecturer at the School of Applied Social Studies, University Collge Cork, where she works across a broad range of adult education, undergraduate and postgraduate programmes. Her research interests embody the activist and academic and focus on a range of issues concerning gender, equality and diversity in local and global contexts. Her research contributions include analyses of aspects of women’s livehihoods; child trafficking; care for children; migrant children’s experiences and interactions of education; community supports for people, younger and older, living with disabilities; as well as the analysis of care and experiences of carers. She is a co–founder of Anti–Deportation Ireland, and has had involvement with migrant and asylum–seeking communities since the 1990s.

Mike FitzGibbon has a background in engineering and information systems, and began work in development in the early 1990s, later working at the International Famine Centre in UCC and the Higher Education Equality Unit until 2002, working as a development consultant until 2005. Since then, he has lectured on and been a part of the development of the UCC International Development undergraduate degree programme; a joint MSc in Rural Development with universities in Ethiopia; and on UCC’s Masters in Food Security Management programme. He has always had a strong interest in ethics, human rights and development issues, particularly in relation marginalised groups. For the past two decades, he has had a deep involvement with the asylum–seeking and immigrant communities, and help to found Anti–Deportation Ireland, a local movement working with asylum–seekers.

About the book

This book examines approaches and responses to working with the asylum–seeking, refugee and migrant communities in Ireland. Through their experiences, analyses and activist accounts, contributors name direct provision as a system that facilitates the marginalization and dehumanizing of people. In making visible some of the undocumented challenges to direct provision, the co–operation and engagement between local and migrant communities, and the very real and moving experiences of living in such conditions, this publication forms a part of the ongoing challenge to direct provision. It calls for a reconsideration of the infallibility of the reductionist–dominant narrative that reduces responsibility to care and protect human life, to narrow economic considerations, and calls on the State to recognize its duty of care in its fullest conceptualization. While analysing through the lens of care, the reductionist and repressive State policies and practices are revealed. Most emphasis is placed on the reactions and resilience of the asylum–seeking community, through their numerous acts of resistance, supported by a signifi cant cohort of friends and activists within and outwith the direct provision system.

This eBook can be cited

This edition of the eBook can be cited. To enable this we have marked the start and end of a page. In cases where a word straddles a page break, the marker is placed inside the word at exactly the same position as in the physical book. This means that occasionally a word might be bifurcated by this marker.

Contents

List of Illustrations

jacqui o’riordan

Introduction: The Uncaring State

part iStructures and Policy on Asylum in the Irish State

piaras mac éinrí

1 Concepts of Asylum and Refugee Status: Irish Approaches to Date

claire dorrity

2 State Security versus Human Security: Asylum Policy and Its Discontents

michael blaney

3 Who’s Afraid of the Irish State?

joe moore

4 Activist Beginnings: Local and National Campaigns and Initiatives

daniel delaney and megan killian

5 The McMahon Working Group

part iiChallenging Institutions: Activist Perspectives

joe moore

6 Racisms, State Racism and Resistance

lucky khambule

7 The Power of Organizing from Within: Lucky’s Life and Journey in Direct Provision and KRAC Protest

florence eriamiantoe

8 My Experience of Living in Direct Provision

gertrude cotter

9 Beyond Ribbon Cutting: A Personal Reflection

tess o

10 The Liberation Protest

part iiiChildhoods Lived in Direct Provision: Providing Alternative Spaces and Places Where Children Are Enabled to Flourish

annie cummins

11 Children without Childhoods: The Experiences of Children in Direct Provision in Ireland

nomaxabixo princess maye

12 The Nature and Consequences of Institutionalizing Families

temmy a

13 My Journey into Direct Provision

jacqui o’riordan, deirdre horgan and shirley martin

14 Children’s Play in a Hostile Environment

kaffy

15 Controlled: Raising Children and Living under Surveillance

naomi masheti

16 The Psychosocial Wellbeing of Asylum Seeking Children Living in Direct Provision Centres in Ireland

part ivWomen and Men as Gendered Adults Living in Direct Provision

ciara burke

17 Women’s Migratory Journeys: Hope and Pain – From Home to DP to Home Again

amin sharifi isaloo

18 Liminality in the Direct Provisional System: Living under Extreme Rules and Conditions

dominic hewson

19 ‘Being Made Different’: Inactivity, Dependency and Emasculation in Direct Provision

keelin barry

20 Invisible: Disabled Child and Adult Asylum Seekers Living in Direct Provision

caroline muthoni munyi

21 Struggles of Living in Direct Provision

ellen, jessie nswazi, natalie

22 Leaving, Arriving, Beginning: Residents’ Stories of Coming

joe moore

23 Living under the Threat of Deportation: Activist Counter-Deportation Strategies in a Changing Environment

vukasin nedeljkovic

24 Direct Provision Diary 2007–2009

melanie marks and hassan ali hassan

25 Resisting: Poems

part vRealizing Human and Social Potential: Initiatives, Experiences, Resistances

niyi kolawole

26 From Seeking Asylum to Serving Knowledge: The Journey of an Asylum Seeker in Ireland

pako mokobo

27 My Journey through Higher Education: A Struggle for Self-Improvement to Contribute to Irish Society

mike fitzgibbon

28 Becoming a University of Sanctuary: Making UCC a Welcome Place for Asylum Seekers

graham clifford, yolanda mhene and justine looney

29 The Sanctuary Runner Stories

vera stojanovic

30 Ordinary

joe moore

31 Anti-Deportation Ireland: Emergence, Growth and Actions

angela veale, sarah robinson, naomi masheti, and barbara tint

32 Applied Improvisation and Visual Methodologies in Priority Identification with Asylum Seeker Women in Direct Provision

kathy d’arcy

33 The Journey to Me: Exploring Identity and Belonging through Creativity with Children Living in Direct Provision in Cork

fiona kearney and tadhg crowley

34 Creative Agency: Enabling Cultural Participation for Young Asylum Seekers, Refugees and Migrants in a Museum Context

mike fitzgibbon

Conclusions: Reduction, Repression, Reaction, Resistance

Index

←0 | 1→

jacqui o’riordan

Introduction: The Uncaring State

Direct Provision and Dispersal

This publication attempts to make visible the realities of living in Ireland’s international State Protection system – Direct Provision and Dispersal – the Irish State’s response to people who are seeking asylum in Ireland, while their applications for protection are being considered. Briefly, in direct provision accommodation people live in shared hostel-type accommodation, meals are provided and they are given a small financial allowance of €38.80 a week for adults and €29.801 for children. The system is overseen by the Reception and Integration Agency (RIA). While a very limited right to work was introduced in 20182, those who are in the system for longer times continue to be prohibited from working and earning a living, sometimes for several years. Adults transition from young, to middle, to older adulthood in the system, people meet, develop relationships and children are born. Children come to Ireland with their parent or parents, sometimes leaving other, often older siblings, behind. They continue their childhoods living in this system and transitioning from early childhood, to middle childhood, to teenage years and onto young adulthood.

Details

Pages
XII, 486
Year
2020
ISBN (PDF)
9781788745185
ISBN (ePUB)
9781788745192
ISBN (MOBI)
9781788745208
ISBN (Softcover)
9781788745178
DOI
10.3726/b14215
Language
English
Publication date
2020 (July)
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, New York, Wien, 2020. XII, 486 pp., 18 fig. b/w, 1 tables.

Biographical notes

Jacqui O'Riordan (Volume editor) Mike FitzGibbon (Volume editor)

Jacqui O’Riordan is a lecturer at the School of Applied Social Studies, University Collge Cork, where she works across a broad range of adult education, undergraduate and postgraduate programmes. Her research interests embody the activist and academic and focus on a range of issues concerning gender, equality and diversity in local and global contexts. Her research contributions include analyses of aspects of women’s livehihoods; child trafficking; care for children; migrant children’s experiences and interactions of education; community supports for people, younger and older, living with disabilities; as well as the analysis of care and experiences of carers. She is a co–founder of Anti-Deportation Ireland, and has had involvement with migrant and asylum–seeking communities since the 1990s. Mike FitzGibbon has a background in engineering and in information systems, and began work in development in the early 1990s, later working at the International Famine Centre in UCC and the Higher Education Equality Unit until 2002, working as a development consultant until 2005. Since then, he has lectured on and been a part of the development of the UCC International Development undergraduate degree programme; a joint MSc in Rural Development with universities in Ethiopia; and on UCC’s Masters in Food Security Management programme. He has always had a strong interest in ethics, human rights and development issues, particularly in relation marginalised groups. For the past two decades, he has had a deep involvement with the asylum-seeking and immigrant communities, and help to found Anti-Deportation Ireland, a local movement working with asylum-seekers.

Previous

Title: Direct Provision
book preview page numper 1
book preview page numper 2
book preview page numper 3
book preview page numper 4
book preview page numper 5
book preview page numper 6
book preview page numper 7
book preview page numper 8
book preview page numper 9
book preview page numper 10
book preview page numper 11
book preview page numper 12
book preview page numper 13
book preview page numper 14
book preview page numper 15
book preview page numper 16
book preview page numper 17
book preview page numper 18
book preview page numper 19
book preview page numper 20
book preview page numper 21
book preview page numper 22
book preview page numper 23
book preview page numper 24
book preview page numper 25
book preview page numper 26
book preview page numper 27
book preview page numper 28
book preview page numper 29
book preview page numper 30
book preview page numper 31
book preview page numper 32
book preview page numper 33
book preview page numper 34
book preview page numper 35
book preview page numper 36
book preview page numper 37
book preview page numper 38
book preview page numper 39
book preview page numper 40
500 pages