ABSTRACT

This book examines the impact and effects of refugee externalisation policies in two regions: Australia’s border control practices in Southeast Asia and the Pacific and the activities of the European Union and its member states in North Africa.

The book assesses the underlying motivations, processes, policy frameworks and human rights violations of refugee externalisation practices. Case studies illuminate the funding, institutional partnerships, geopolitical impacts, financial costs and the human price of refugee externalisation. It provides the first truly comparative analysis of asylum externalisation and explores maritime interdiction, extraterritorial process, containment and third-country interception, and communication campaigns in Southeast Asia and the Middle East/North Africa.

This book will be of key interest to scholars and students of refugee and asylum studies, law, politics and the arts, legal practitioners, non-governmental organisations and policymakers grappling with the issues of detention, refugee externalisation practices and the growing need to find safety for the world’s most vulnerable.

chapter 1|24 pages

Examining refugee externalisation policies

A comparative study of Europe and Australia

part I|42 pages

What is externalisation?

chapter 2|18 pages

The cat and mouse game of refugee externalisation policies

Between law and politics

chapter 3|22 pages

The externalisation of refugee policies

The politics of distancing

part II|36 pages

Interception at sea

chapter 4|15 pages

Australia's boat push-back policy

Hyper-legalism and obfuscation in action

chapter 5|19 pages

Interdiction in the Mediterranean Sea

From Unilateral to Multilateral Cooperation *

part III|37 pages

Extraterritorial processing

chapter 7|16 pages

Beyond Europe's borders

Containment and deterrence across the Mediterranean Sea

part IV|28 pages

Containment and third country interception

chapter 8|14 pages

Floodgate politics

Europe's externalisation policies and Turkey's response

chapter 9|12 pages

Externalised immobilisation strategies

From detaining to containing refugees in Indonesia

part V|37 pages

Communicating externalisation and resistance

chapter 10|18 pages

Awareness campaigns to deter migrants

A neoliberal industry for symbolic bordering

chapter 11|17 pages

#LetThemStay

Evaluating communications factors that contributed to asylum policy reform in Australia

part VI|12 pages

The future of externalisation

chapter 12|10 pages

Refugee externalisation policies

What we have learnt and where are we going?