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‘I’m always afraid for the future of my family’: why it’s too hard for some refugees to reunite with loved ones

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Author: Mary Anne Kenny, Associate Professor, School of Law, Murdoch University

Original article: https://theconversation.com/im-always-afraid-for-the-future-of-my-family-why-its-too-hard-for-some-refugees-to-reunite-with-loved-ones-254710


When refugees flee their home country due to war, violence, conflict or persecution, they are often forced to leave behind their families.

For more than 30,000 people who have sought asylum in Australia since arriving more than a decade ago, that separation has stretched into more than a decade. This group of people – known in policy circles as “the legacy caseload” – need a clear pathway to reunite with family members.

Refugees separated from family are plagued by guilt and worry for their family members’ safety. This makes it extremely difficult to focus on education, work or getting settled.

The right to family unity is a basic human right and vital to any humane refugee policy.

However, tensions arise between refugees’ conceptions of family and the restrictive definitions embedded in Australian law.

High costs, complex administrative requirements, and lengthy processing times often delay or prevent families from reuniting.

The legacy caseload: more than a decade in limbo

The so-called “legacy caseload” refers to approximately 30,000 people who arrived by boat between 2012 and 2014, and who were placed on Temporary Protection Visas.

For more than a decade, they were denied a pathway to permanency and barred from sponsoring family members to join them in Australia.

That policy made life so unbearable, more than 6,500 people from this group “chose” to return home despite the risks they face. This raises serious concerns about whether they were genuinely able to make a free choice, or were pushed into returning to danger.

Since the Albanese government’s 2022 commitment to end temporary protection, almost 20,000 people have been eligible to transition to permanent visas through the Resolution of Status process.

This is a crucial step. Without a permanent visa, they could not sponsor family members.

Even with permanency, however, family reunion remains out of reach for many “legacy caseload” refugees. This is due to outdated laws, harsh policies and bureaucratic delays.

Many of these refugees have not seen their spouses or children since before their arrival. Because they arrived by boat, they are barred from proposing family members through the humanitarian visa program and must use the family migration program.

That’s significant because the humanitarian program has a much broader definition of “family”, and grants people access to settlement services after they arrive.

Still unresolved is the fate of some 7,000 people who were refused protection under the flawed fast track system (a now abandoned policy that was supposed to speed up processing but actually introduced delays and unfairness).

These people urgently need a pathway to permanency.

Why family reunion remains so difficult

The main barriers to family reunification for refugees include:

These uncertainties further delay the process and add emotional and financial strain.

Calls for reform

Several organisations, including the Refugee Council of Australia, have called for clear, achievable reforms. These include:

They have also called for changes to the legal definitions of “dependent” and “member of the family unit”. This is to reflect the diverse familial structures in many refugee communities.

For many refugees, family extends beyond the Western concept of the nuclear family. It may also encompass, for instance, adult daughters and parents (who often play pivotal care-giving roles).

Another big issue for many refugee families is single young women in Afghanistan being left behind because they have aged out.

Reuniting families

Australia can learn from other countries.

Canada’s refugee sponsorship program actively supports family reunification.

New Zealand offers a more affordable and flexible system. Their definitions of family are broader and visa fees are lower.

Without family reunion, a refugee’s safety remains incomplete.

As one refugee told researchers:

I’m partly safer [in Australia], but inside I’m not safe […] I’m always afraid for the future of my family.

Thousands of refugees in Australia are still waiting. Their families remain in danger. The legal and policy tools to fix this already exist. What’s missing, for now, is the political will.

Reforming Australia’s family reunion system would mean more efficient refugee resettlement and integration, ultimately benefiting broader Australian society.

Mary Anne Kenny is a member of the Migration Institute of Australia and the Law Council of Australia and an affiliate of the UNSW Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law. She was on the Ministerial Council on Asylum Seekers and Detention (an independent advisory body) between 2012 and 2018.

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