Asylum Seekers in Israel: Challenges to Social Work

Author:

Nuttman-Shwartz Orit1,Shinar Levanon Ofer2

Affiliation:

1. School of Social Work, Sapir College, D.N. Hof Ashkelon, Israel

2. Department of Social Work, Dean of Students, Ruppin Academic Center, D.N. Emek Hefer, Israel

Abstract

AbstractThe challenges facing social workers in addressing the migration crisis are myriad and complex. Against this background, the current article presents a case study on the response of Israeli social work to the asylum seekers, which allows us to identify gaps between the social work profession’s global agenda and its implementation. The article examines how recent immigration policies have impacted Israeli social workers’ responses to these challenges. Following a brief description of Israel’s policies for controlling and limiting the entrance of asylum seekers to the country, the article offers insights into social workers’ involvement in some of the main social services that aim to assist asylum seekers in Israel. Insights are also offered into the response of Israeli social workers to the community of asylum seekers, which focuses on individual needs and on urgent needs. Several explanations for these emphases was offers, noting that they may reflect a more general gap between repeated statements about the significance of human rights for the social work profession on the one hand and the professional reality on the other. Finally, several strategies for social work in the community of asylum seekers and in society as a whole are recommended.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Health(social science)

Reference61 articles.

1. ACHSSW (2006) We’ve Boundless Plains to Share: The First Report of the People’s Inquiry into Detention, Canberra, Australian Council of Heads of Schools of Social Work, available online at https://www.safecom.org.au/pdfs/peoples-inquiry-first-report.pdf (accessed 4 September 2018).

2. Union responsibility to migrant workers: A global justice approach;Albin,2016

3. Amnesty International (2017) ‘Israel: Human rights situation remains dire’, Amnesty International Submission for the UN Universal Periodic Review, 29th Session of the UPR Working Group, available online at https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/mde15/6879/2017/en/ (accessed 4 September 2018).

4. Assaf (2014) ‘Asylum seekers in Israel lacking access to welfare services’, available online at http://assaf.org.il/en/sites/default/files/Welfare%20Services%20Asylum%20Seekers%20Assaf%20April%202014.pdf (accessed 4 September 2018).

5. Blurred rights, local practices: Social work and immigration in Italy;Barberis;British Journal of Social Work,2014

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