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Australian academics call for asylum seekers and refugees to be granted permanent protection visas

University of South Australia academics have called for 31,000 refugees “living in a state of damaging uncertainty” in Australia over the past decade to be granted permanent protection visas.

In a new policy brief announced today, commissioned by UNSW’s Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law, UniSA PhD candidate and Murdoch University Associate Professor Mary Anne Kenny, Professor Nicholas Procter and Emeritus Professor Carol Grech argue that temporary protection visas are “unfair, expensive, impractical and inconsistent” with international obligations.

The report authors say that refugees who arrived in Australia by boat to seek asylum in 2012-2014, have either been granted Temporary Protection Visas (TPVs) or Safe Haven Enterprise Visas (SHEVs), which allow them to work but not to reunite with family or to travel freely.

“The rest live on precarious short-term bridging visas, some without the right to work and many without access to income support, adding to the trauma they have already suffered,” Prof Procter says.

The policy brief makes 17 recommendations to resolve the legal status of refugees and asylum seekers so they can settle into Australia and make a “valuable contribution to the country”.

Assoc Prof Mary Kenny says requiring refugees to re-apply for protection every few years is not only traumatic for them, but it also costs taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars.

“With a permanent visa, people in the ‘legacy caseload’ would no longer be held back. They could qualify for Commonwealth-supported places at university, they would have better job prospects, could take out business loans or mortgages and feel like they belong,” says Assoc Prof Mary Kenny.

“Most importantly, they would be able to see their family abroad, and under our recommendations, their applications for family members to join them in Australia would be prioritised.

“These reforms enable everyone to move forward and live their lives to the full,” she says.

The key recommendations are:

The policy brief is available at: Temporary Protection Visas in Australia: A reform proposal

Notes for editors

Associate Professor Mary Anne Kenny is based at the School of Law, Murdoch University, and is also a legal practitioner working closely with refugee NGOs and refugee communities. She is undertaking her PhD at the University of South Australia.

Professor Nicholas Procter is the Director, Mental Health and Suicide Prevention Research and Education Group, Clinical and Health Sciences, University of South Australia.

Emeritus Professor Carol Grech, University of South Australia, has had a long and distinguished professional career as a registered nurse, academic and researcher.