Refugee livelihood perspectives: Post-traumatic growth in histories of Vietnamese, Bosnian, and Tamil Refugees in Australia

Author:

Green Sarah1ORCID,Nguyen Austen Anh2ORCID,Kandasamy Niro3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Humanities and Social Sciences, Faculty of Education and Arts, Australian Catholic University , Melbourne, Australia

2. Research Centre for Refugees, Migration, and Humanitarian Studies, Institute for Humanities and Social Sciences, Australian Catholic University , Melbourne, Australia

3. History, School of Humanities, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences , University of Sydney , NSW, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Refugee livelihood studies have mostly focused on policy and international aid programming and have yet to explore refugee people’s long-term development beyond the initial resettlement period. This article examines the experiences of Vietnamese, Bosnian, and Tamil refugees resettled in Australia during the height of the multicultural agenda in the 1980s and 1990s. Drawing on fifty oral histories, the article argues that refugees’ struggle and transformation of trauma in the past fuelled civic engagement in their new host communities. It explores the nexus of refugee lived experiences, livelihoods, and post-traumatic growth in the context of multicultural Australia to consider refugee livelihood as a long-term process. Crossing disciplinary boundaries of history and psychology, the article shows how some refugees re-interpret their trauma as motivation for positive change, a manifestation of post-traumatic growth, expressed as civic engagement, including becoming political actors in response to their histories of trauma, resistance, and growth beyond resettlement.

Funder

Australian Research Council Kathleen Fitzpatrick Laureate Fellowship

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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3. Multiculturalism in Crisis: The New Politics of Race and National Identity in Australia;Ang;TOPIA: Canadian Journal of Cultural Studies,1998

4. Histories of Migrants and Refugees in Australia;Balint;Australian Historical Studies,2018

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