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Dr Suzi Casimiro
Edith Cowan University
Breaking the Isolation Cycle: The Experience of Muslim
Refugee Women in Australia
Abstract
Australia has accepted an increasingly diverse
group of refugees and immigrants
from a variety of nations, cultural
backgrounds and religious faiths in recent decades. In
particular, the past ten years have seen a growing Muslim
presence in Australia with the increased settlement of refugees
from Iraq, Afghanistan, Sudan, Somalia and former Yugoslavia
being the main countries of origin. Due in large measure to
recent Muslim migration, in 2001 approximately 1.5 per cent of
the Australian population identifies Islam as their religion, and
Islam represents the third largest religion in Australia after
Christianity and Buddhism (Australian Bureau of Statistics,
2002). Many Muslims have a range of specific needs and concerns
related to their religious heritage and their migration
experience. Perhaps the most acute and distressing needs are
those relating to Muslim refugee women.
There is clearly an immediate need to
empirically examine processes of resettlement experienced by
Muslim refugee women in Australian society, which is crucial to
understanding the nature of social cohesion in an avowedly
multicultural society. Based on the results of focus groups and
key informant interviews conducted among Muslim refugee women in
Western Australia in 2004-05, we argue that many such women are
caught in a ‘cycle of isolation’ emanating from
certain features of their religious, ethnic and refugee
background, and also from the social, political and institutional
processes of the host society. This cycle of isolation is the
result of a multiplicity of factors interacting in a complex,
mutually reinforcing manner, where both internal
‘ethnic’ factors and external
‘marginalising’ factors come into
play.
The model
that we propose has important implications on the debate
surrounding the integration of immigrants within Australian
society and other Western nations. The position is advanced that
integration – to the extent that Muslim immigrants face
greater challenges on this matter than any other immigrant
category – is due to the reinforcing effect that results
from ethnic and marginalizing factors working in concert with one
another, rather than any particular ‘group’ being to
blame as such.
Bio
Dr. Suzy Casimiro is a lecturer in the
School of International, Cultural and Community Studies at Edith
Cowan University. She has a strong research background in the
area of Australian migration policy and the experiences of women
migrants to Australia from Muslim backgrounds and other European
nations. Dr Casimiro teaches in the area of Social Policy and
Sociology.
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