Entries in causelink (2)

Wednesday
Oct032012

The Link Between Refugees and Domestic Violence

As September comes to an end, Human Trafficking Awareness Month gives way to a new social awareness issue and a new month. October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month. As Vox Culture continues to progress through its trimester on “Refugees at Home”, we will take a moment to look at how the issue of domestic violence affects refugees.

For the audience to grasp the connections that may exist between domestic violence and refugees, it is important to first note the different types of domestic violence that exist and that Vox Culture seeks to fight.

Domestic violence is the abuse of an individual or group that consists of a physical, sexual, emotional, verbal, and/or economic nature. Physical abuse involves contact intended to cause feelings of intimidation, pain, injury, or other physical suffering or bodily harm. Sexual abuse consists of the use of force or threat to obtain participation in unwanted sexual activity. Emotional abuse involves the intentional psychological degradation of an individual to obtain a form of mental control over the individual. Verbal abuse is emotionally abusive behavior involving the use of language. Economic abuse happens when one intimate partner has control over the other partner's access to economic resources.

Refugees can be, and have been, victims of all these various forms of domestic violence. While there are numerous individual reports and stories that can be found through a quick online search, Physical and Sexual abuse have been continuously prevalent amongst refugees, with the victims more often than not being women and children. These two types of abuse, together with Emotional, Verbal and Economic occur in refugee communities largely due to cultural differences. Examples of such vary, from families forcing their children to marry before adolescence due to tribal customs, to women being subjugated to domestic servant roles where they are forced to stay at home and have limited to no personal rights.

In many cultures, domestic violence is not considered a crime, and often refugee victims are unaware that they can report abuse. Even when these victims do report abuse, mainstream domestic violence victim services agencies might find themselves lacking the personnel with the appropriate multicultural skills as well as ill-equipped to deal with issues specific to foreign cultures and different refugee communities.

While many domestic violence services agencies and non-profit organizations have been gradually making progress in seeking to address domestic violence within refugee communities, more has to be done by society to help break the cycle of domestic violence within refugee communities. We must help empower the victims, invest in their talents, and offer them the opportunity to build upon themselves. We must also take the time to learn about the specific refugee communities that reside around us, listen to their stories, and try to understand certain aspects of their culture. By educating ourselves about others we are better equipped to educate these same individuals or groups in return - especially as to why domestic violence IS a crime. If we are to take these or similar actions, we can help give a voice and further empower refugee victims of domestic violence.

To learn more about what other organizations in Texas, such as The Houston Area Women's Center and the Texas Association Against Sexual Assault (TAASA), are doing to combat domestic violence and/or help refugee victims, you can visit their websites by clicking on the following links:

The Houston Area Women's Center

Texas Association Against Sexual Assault (TAASA)

Tuesday
Sep112012

The Link Between Refugees and Human Trafficking

As Vox Culture begins its trimester on “Refugees at Home”, it is important to note how interconnected our world can be, specifically in terms of the social issues that occur around us every day.  We believe that symptoms from one social issue can be closely linked to another and our goal is to help our audience grasp a better understanding of these connections. September is Houston’s Human Trafficking Awareness Month.  Appropriately, the goal of this post is to describe how Vox’s current focus on the issue of refugees is connected to human trafficking.

The below points were drawn from a 2007 United Nations High Commission for Refugees Report, written by Kaori Saito, that addresses the new issues in refugee research.

(1)    Victims of human trafficking can be refugees.

While some trafficked victims are able to go back to their native homeland after having gone through their ordeal, some may be unable to return for fear of further reprisals by traffickers, without much state protection. These victims would fall within the definition of a refugee according to Article 1A(2) of the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees.

Trafficked persons and those who fear being trafficked can be defined as refugees under the 1951 Convention if they meet all the elements defined in Article 1(A). These individuals would also be entitled to international refugee protection as long as there is a well-founded fear of persecution based on one of the Convention grounds and their homeland cannot (or refuses to) provide protection against further re-trafficking or reprisals by traffickers. Saito further states that, “there is no reason why a victim of trafficking who fears returning home due to the real possibility of being re-trafficked, targeted for reprisals, or threatened with death, should not be granted refugee status where the state of origin is unable or unwilling to protect that person against such harm.”

(2)    Refugees can also become victims of human trafficking.

Refugees and internally displaced individuals fleeing from persecution are also targets for traffickers. Due to having been displaced and other related vulnerabilities, refugees and internally displaced individuals are put at a greater risk of exploitation and abuse. Saito further adds that, “to access countries of asylum in an environment of tightening visa regimes and border controls, some refugees may resort to desperate and even illegal measures in their search for a safe country and of livelihoods and can fall prey to trafficking.”

If Saito’s argument in this report is to be summarized, the connection between human trafficking and refugees is seen as coalescing around the term persecution. In order to learn more about the overall discussion, I highly encourage you to read this UNHCR report… you will be amazed as to how the causes that Vox Culture focuses on are truly interconnected.

http://www.unhcr.org/research/RESEARCH/476652742.pdf