Detained asylum seekers, health care, and questions of human(e)ness

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Abstract

This paper contains some personal observations of life inside Woomera Detention Centre and certain aspects of the detained asylum seeker experience. This is from my own reference point as a psychiatric nurse who in 2002 undertook a six-week contract at Woomera, and from my subsequent sociological reflections on this experience. I draw attention to the disintegrative effect of detention on the individual and the bleakness of everyday life symbolically expressed in forms of self-harm. Then, through the example of medication administration, I show the vulnerability of those in detention to bureaucratic procedures that become micropolitical sites, providing the machinery for dehumanising acts. I conclude by calling for sociologists, health care workers, and the public health community in general to take a more active political stance against a Government and its policies that actively erode spirit, the body and, for some, even life.

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APA

Koutroulis, G. (2003). Detained asylum seekers, health care, and questions of human(e)ness. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health. Public Health Association of Australia Inc. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-842X.2003.tb00413.x

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