Read background paper to Once Upon a Time in Cabramatta (OUATC)

OUATC was influenced by a paper of mine prepared in the early 2000’s, just after the harshest period of the Cabramatta crisis. To read the paper, click here.

Abstract

The Vietnamese arrival and integration into Australia represents a quintessential case of cultures in collision. In 1975 there was effectively no Vietnamese presence. Over the next twenty five years the community grew to over two hundred thousand members. Before 1975 Vietnam and Australia barely knew each other – except through the prism of the American War. By 2001 Generation 2 were a significant part of Australian political, economic and cultural life.  The Vietnamese were used as the trigger for the end of the bi-partisanship on multiculturalism at the end of the 1970s, were implicated in the rising paranoia about unsafe cities in the 1980s, and centrally embroiled in the emergence of a politics of race in the 1990s. They also reflect two trajectories of integration – the anomie associated with marginalization, and the trans-national engagement associated with globalizing elites. This paper explores processes of cultural collision and reconstitution through an examination of four dimensions of the Vietnamese in Australia –  the criminal world of the heroin trade; the position of Vietnamese women in the economy of the clothing industry;  the rise and fall of criminal and politician Phuong Ngo; and the celebration of Generation 2.

Racism Human Rights Cultural Diversity and ….

For those interested in the growing debates about the new agenda on human rights and anti-racism, see my end-of-year papers:

Andrew Jakubowicz  Chinese Walls: Australian Multiculturalism and the Necessity for Human Rights Journal of Intercultural Studies Vol. 32, Iss. 6, 2011)  also at https://andrewjakubowicz.com/publications/chinesewalls/

Andrew Jakubowicz Cyber racism (Grey edition)
in Helen Sykes (ed) Free Speech, Democracy and New Media, FutureLeaders, 2012. https://andrewjakubowicz.com/publications/cyber-racism_freedom/

Andrew Jakubowicz Racism, anti-racism campaigns and Australian social research: a case study in recovering socially-useful knowledge  https://andrewjakubowicz.com/publications/antiracism1998/

Andrew Jakubowicz  Playing the triangle: Cosmopolitanism, Cultural Capital and Social Capital as intersecting scholarly discourses about social inclusion and marginalisation in Australian public policy debates , Cosmopolitan Civil Societies December 2011 https://andrewjakubowicz.com/publications/playing-the-triangle-cosmopolitanism-cultural-capital-and-social-capital-as-intersecting-scholarly-discourses-about-social-inclusion-and-marginalisation-in-australian-public-policy-debates/

International Students:good information crucial to recognising human rights issues

This paper written in collaboration with Dr Devaki Monani, analyses the social science perspectives that can help us understand the past and project the future of the international students situation in Australia. The paper was commissioned by Universities Australia, the Human Rights Commission and the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia, to draw on social science research through a human rights lens. The paper does not reflect the views of the commissioning bodies, though the AHRC has a campaign to press the federal government to move forward on human rights issues for international students.

Download the paper here.

International student movement rising, paper warns – Campus Review

International Students flee Indifferent Country – The Australian

Human Rights “lost in action” – UTS News

Introduction

The attraction, retention, well-being and quality of outcomes for international students have become major policy and political issues in Australia and in many of the students’ countries of origin. In Australia the perceived range of environmental and social impacts of a rapidly growing international student presence has stimulated public attention. The economic contribution of international students has also played a critical role in Australia’s survival through the global financial crisis, buffering the Australian dollar and sustaining a higher level of service sector export income than almost any other nation ….