Commission Website: National Inquiry into Children in Immigration Detention
Click here to return to the Submission Index
Submission to National Inquiry
into Children in Immigration Detention from
The Australian Psychological
Society
Summary
of Concerns About Children in Immigration Detention
is Worse than Prison
is a Negative Socialisation Experience
Accentuates Developmental Risks
Threatens the Bond Between Children and Significant Caregivers
Limits Educational Opportunities
Has Traumatic Impacts on Child Detainees
Exacerbates the Impacts of Other Traumas
for the Wider Australian Community
Raises Unanswered Questions and Concerns
Summary
The Australian Psychological
Society categorically condemns the practice of detaining child asylum
seekers and their families, on the grounds that it is not commensurate
with psychological best practice concerning childrens development
and mental health and wellbeing. Detention of children in this fashion
is also arguably a violation of the UN Convention on the Rights of the
Child.
A thorough review
of relevant psychological theory and available research findings from
international research has led the Australian Psychological Society to
conclude that:
- Detention is a
negative socialisation experience.
- Detention is
accentuates developmental risks.
- Detention threatens
the bonds between children and significant caregivers.
- Detention limits
educational opportunities.
- Detention has
traumatic impacts on children of asylum seekers.
- Detention reduces
childrens potential to recover from trauma.
- Detention exacerbates
the impacts of other traumas.
- Detention of children
from these families in many respects is worse for them than being
imprisoned.
In the absence of
any indication from the Australian Government that it intends in the near
future to alter the practice of holding children in immigration detention,
the Australian Psychological Societys intermediate position is that
the facilitation of short-term and long-term psychological development
and wellbeing of children is the basic tenet upon which detention centres
should be audited and judged. Based on that position, the Society has
identified a series of questions and concerns that arise directly from
the various psychological perspectives that have been brought to bear
on estimating the effects of detention on child asylum seekers. The Society
argues that, because these questions and concerns relate specifically
to improvement and maintenance of child detainees educational, social
and psychological wellbeing, they are legitimate matters for the Inquiry
to consider and investigate.
- What steps are
currently being taken to monitor the psyc hological welfare of the children
in detention? In particular, what steps are being taken to monitor the
psychological wellbeing of children arriving from war-torn countries?
- What qualifications
and training do staff who care for children and their families in detention
centres have? What knowledge do they have of psychological issues faced
by people who have been subjected to traumatic experiences and are suffering
high degrees of anxiety, stress and uncertainty?
- What provisions
have been made for psycho-educational assessment of childrens
specific learning needs prior to their attending formal educational
programmes?
- who are suffering
chronic and/or vicarious trauma as a result of witnessing threatening
behaviour whilst in detention?
- What provisions
have been made for families who have been seriously affected by displacement
to participate in family therapy?
- What critical
incident debriefing procedures are in place for children who have witnessed
their parents, other family members, or social acquaintances engaging
in acts of self-harm or being harmed while in detention? What psychotherapeutic
support is in place for children who themselves have been harmed or
have engaged in self- harmful acts while in detention?
- What provisions
are in place for parenting programmes that provide support for parents
of children under extremely difficult psychological and physical circumstances?
- What efforts are
being made to provide parents with the opportunity to model traditional
family roles for children, such as working to earn an income, meal preparation,
other household duties, etc.?
- What opportunities
are in place for the assessment of safety issues such as bullying, and
sexual or physical abuse of children or their mothers in detention centres?
- How are resources
distributed to children and families in detention centres?
- What socialization
opportunities are available either within detention centres or in the
wider community for children to develop skills and independence, engage
in social activities, participate in cultural traditions, and communicate
and interaction with same-age peers and adults from similar ethnic and
religious backgrounds?
- What access do
children and families have to videos, music and entertainment from their
cultures of origin?
- What provisions
are in place to ensure the maintenance of privacy in a manner commensurate
with usual cultural practice?
- What is the Governments
rationale for continuing to implement a policy of mandatory detention
of child asylum seekers that on the face of it is likely to have a pernicious
impact on these childrens mental health?
- In view of the
evidence on the potential long-term impact of mandatory detention on
children, what processes may be followed by Government to avoid such
a practice and, more importantly, to develop policies and practices
that will have a positive impact on these childrens psychological
development and mental health?
Context of Concerns
About Children in Immigration Detention
By definition, refugees
are people who have fled or been driven from their countries of origin
(or habitual residence) and cannot return for fear of persecution, war
or oppression (Collier, 1991). There are four principles on which the
Australian refugee policies are supposedly based (Committee on Migration
Regulations, 1992):
- Australia fully
recognizes its humanitarian commitment and responsibility to admit refugees
for relocation;
- The decision to
accept refugees must always remain with the Government of Australia;
- Special assistance
will often need to be provided for the movement of refugees in designated
situations or for their relocation in Australia; and
- It may not be
in the interest of some refugees to settle in Australia.
The Australian Government
makes an annual contribution to the United Nations High Commission for
Refugees (UNHCR), which is the main organisation associated with such
relocation.
Australia has developed
a reputation as the only Western country to enforce a policy of mandatory
detention for asylum seekers who arrive in the country without entry documents,
irrespective of their age or family situation (Silove, Steel & Watters,
2000). Australia receives relatively few refugees on a per capital basis,
being ranked 17 out of 21 industrialised countries receiving refugees.
Figures from Amnesty
International indicate that 1103 children were held in immigration detention
centres in Australia in 2000/2001, with no legal limit being placed on
the length of their detention. The backgrounds of these children in mandatory
detention are unique. They often arrive in Australia after fleeing war,
violence, economic deprivation, religious persecution and famine. Their
experience of flight frequently adds to their hardships and emotional
trauma. It is not uncommon for them to experience the death of parents
and loved ones, loss of home and destruction of community, separation
and even torture and starvation. The implication of detention in relation
to a particularly vulnerable group has important psychological and sociocultural
ramifications for the Australian community at large, and is of special
relevance for the allied health and medical professions.
Detention is Worse
In many respects,
immigration detention centres in Australia are like prisons. They are
run by custodial staff, enclosed by high fences topped with razor wire,
and those staying there are not free to leave. Time is structured for
the detainees by centre regulations and procedures. Some may argue, despite
these conditions, that detention centres are not nearly as bad as prison
because detainees have good physical facilities and relative freedom to
do what they choose inside their centres. However, notwithstanding the
provision of satisfactory physical facilities in some centres, others
would argue centres are worse than prison. This view is expressed clearly
by a former inmate of Villawood detention centre who said, Detention
centres are not prisons. They are worse because prisoners have basic rights
- in detention centres people have none and they have committed no offence
(Fox, 2002). It is wrong to assume, because peoples basic needs
for shelter, warmth, food, etc. are relatively well catered for, that
their mental health would not be adversely affected. Drawing the distinction
between a detention centre and a prison is important because social psychological
research has shown that being a prisoner can have strong negative impacts
on an individuals psychological well-being. Zimbardos (Haney,Banks,
& Zimbardo, 1973) classic experiment demonstrated this clearly. In
that study, students at Stanford University were recruited and randomly
assigned to play the role of either a prisoner or a guard
in a simulated prison environment. The study was meant to last two weeks,
but it had to be abandoned after six days. In that short period of time
guards grew more aggressive and abusive towards their prisoners
but, more importantly in terms of detainees experiences, prisoners
became passive, helpless and depressed and, within that short time period,
five of the nine original prisoners had been released because
of depression and acute anxiety.
Research in Hong
Kong and the Philippines indicates that the occurrence of apathy, depression
and anxiety are common responses in displaced children of all ages who
have been detained in camps (McCallin, 1992, 1993; Comerford, Armour-
Hileman, & Walker, 1991). It may be argued that these symptoms result
from asylum seekers experiences prior to arriving in the camps but,
while this is certainly likely to be a factor, it is not the whole explanation.
There is evidence to indicate that detainees psychological well-being
is linked to the length of time they have been in detention (McCallin,
1992) and that where there is an open camp policy, i.e., inmates are able
to go out within a prescribed radius, the emotional well-being of children
is better than that of similar children in closed camps (McCallin, 1993).
Underlying this finding
of depression and apathy in detainees is a number of possible factors,
including a perception of lack of control over their lives. As Baumeister
(1998) points out, the need for control (or at least a feeling of control)
has long been identified by psychologists as an important precondition
of psychological wellbeing. One of the most influential theories in this
regard is Seligmans (1975) theory of learned helplessness, which
was later reformulated by Abramson, Seligman and Teasdale (1978). Seligmans
theory postulated that if people come to perceive their situation to be
one over which they have no control, i.e., they are helpless, they become
anxious and subsequently depressed. This apathetic response to the lack
of real or perceived control has been demonstrated in both animals (e.g.
Seligman & Maier, 1967) and humans (see Mikulincer, 1994 for a review).
Such feelings of powerlessness or lack of control over their lives have
commonly been reported by both adolescent and adult immigration detainees
and have been linked with feelings of depression (Comerford et al., 1991;
McCallin, 1992). The perceived lack of control in detention centres arises
largely from the fact that the lives of detainees are controlled by centre
rules and regulations. For instance, they cannot leave to seek work, or
they cannot choose when and what to eat. Not only does such regimentation
rob people of a sense of control, but it also changes their roles, in
turn, impacting on their personal identity and self-esteem. Peoples
identity and selfesteem are intimately linked to their work roles, both
paid and unpaid, as well as to their parenting and/or caring roles (Watson,
1996). A change of roles can affect psychological wellbeing, particularly
if the change is involuntary. Hence, people who become unemployed tend
to suffer psychological distress (Watson, 1996). In the detention centres,
parents cannot fulfil the traditional roles of breadwinners, homemakers,
and caregivers, because many of those duties are performed by centre staff.
In the societies from which Australias immigration detainees come
mainly, such roles are strongly held, and the inability to fulfil them
is likely to impact negatively on individuals as well as on family units.
The attenuation and/or removal of important social roles may lead to reduced
feelings of worth which are likely to be magnified if detainees come to
think of themselves as prisoners, which was the case with
some detainees in the Hong Kong camps (Comerford et al., 1991). This,
together with a learned sense of helplessness, is likely lead to depression.
John Torgrimson, who was Director of Community and Family Services International,
the organisation providing mental health care for detention centres in
Hong Kong in the early 1990s, put it like this:
The whole concept
of provision of basic care is missing and, I think, in a way that changes
the role that a parent can have. Men become emasculated, the fact that
they are not in a role to provide for their family, to make major decisions
in relation to how the children live, how the children grow or what will
happen to them afterwards. In a sense the mother who cannot cook, and
the father who cannot provide for the family, are forced to relinquish
the visible ways in which each literally nourished and cared
for the family. This loss can leave parents feeling useless, incompetent
and helpless, leading to a depression. (Comerford et al., 1991, p. 59)
Where conditions enable detainees to maintain traditional roles, e.g.,
fathers going out to work, they do not become as dependent as those in
detention, and they suffer less adverse effects (Markowitz, 1996; McCallin,
1993). So far the focus of the research being evaluated here has been
on adults, but being in a detention centre also impacts on children. For
instance, McCallin (1992) found that the majority of the more than 600
children surveyed in a Hong Kong detention centre exhibited symptoms of
depression and anxiety. These negative impacts are particularly severe
for unaccompanied children (Comerford et al., 1991; Harding & Looney,
1977; McCallin, 1992). For those who are living with parents, the impact
of living in camp is moderated to some extent by their parents. Parents
can assist children in coping with stress, but that assistance is dependent
on the parents being psychologically he althy. Garbarin, Kostelny, and
Dubrow (1991) claimed that, Children will continue to cope with
difficult environments and maintain reservoirs of resilience so long as
parents are not pushed beyond their stress absorption capacity. Once that
point is exceeded, however, the development of young children deteriorates
rapidly and markedly (p. 380). In immigration detention camps, parents
are not likely to be able to provide this buffering effect because of
their own poor state of psychological wellbeing (Garbarino, 1996; Garbarino
et al., 1991). Many parents have had a traumatic time reaching Australia,
are anxious and depressed because of the situation they are in, and are
without their own extended family support network. They are often consumed
by their own emotional needs, and therefore their capacity to function
in a supporting role for their children is diminished and their parenting
role suffers. As Torgrimson put it, Children learn that parents really
aren't in control, someone else is in control, and so it changes how they
view their parents. It changes how they respond to the parents' authority....
the family structure itself... starts to break down. (Comerford et al.,
1991, p. 59) The above picture of family life in detention centres is
consistent with compelling evidence that children of depressed parents
are at risk of developing psychological difficulties later in life (Downey
& Coyne, 1990) and, in the detention situation, this relationship
is particularly strong in relation to the mothers mental health
(Adjukovic & Adjukovic, 1993; Ekblad, 1993; Miller, 1996).
Detention is a
Negative Socialisation Experience
Bandura (1977) stressed
the importance of modelling processes in childrens development
they observe adults behaving in a particular way and copy that behaviour,
especially if it seems that no negative consequences are associated with
the behaviour. The inability of parents in detention centres to fulfil
traditional parental roles has the potential to disrupt their childrens
social development. If parents are seen as ineffective, then other role
models become more important and these are likely to be those who are
seen to be powerful or successful, and whose behaviour is
rewarded, or at least not punished. These are not necessarily likely to
be good role models. In the Hong Kong centres, children were observed
to be using guards or criminal elements who dominated the
camps as models (Comerford et al., 1991). Because these role models frequently
achieved their aims through the use of vio lence or coercion, e.g., through
the use of threats, batons, teargas etc., a potential exists for the development
at a later stage of aggressive behaviours in children who have been in
detention (Baron & Richardson, 1994). Parents in the Hong Kong detentio
n centres were aware of this problem. For instance, one parent interviewed
in the Comerford et al. (1991) study said if parents say no to fighting
but next door there is fighting, they learn it easily (p. 87), a
sentiment echoed by another who said my child just plays, and mimics
fighting adults (p. 77). Hart, Atkins and Ford (1998) proposed a
transactional model of moral development. In their model stable characteristics
of individuals and their family in conjunction with social attitudes,
self-conceptions and opportunities for the exploration of prosocial action
were preconditions for development of positive moral identity. However,
when families are in disarray, experience poverty or lose their sense
of purpose, children are at greater risk of not being provided with the
necessary family milieu or parenting opportunities to sustain strong,
positive moral identity development. Developmentally, it is critical that
these opportunities to establish vital socialization processes are provided
before formal schooling begins. Otherwise, according to Smale (2001),
it may be too late. Garbarino et al (1991) also suggested that families
provide the emotional context for making positive moral sense of danger
or trauma. Intact communities foster moral development at the next social
level. If, however, trauma occurs in the context of an antidemocratic
social context and in an authoritarian social climate, especially if it
is then manifested within the family system, then truncated moral reasoning
is likely to occur. Garbarino et al. (1991) asserted that children are
at risk of seeing and/or experiencing acts of aggression in detention
institutions, which may be interpreted by young children as appropriate
behaviour in stressful situations.
Detention Accentuates
Adoption of a psychosocial
and temporal perspective on childrens development is a useful way
of drawing attention to the interactivity of the psychological and social
effects of their experiences of
- Leaving their
place of origin;
- Being detained
on foreign shore in an uncertain manner; and
- Adjusting to
life following detention.
The psychological
realm comprises the developmentally contingent cognitive, emotional and
behavioural elements of children's reactions to their perceived experiences.
Their thoughts, memories, dreams, educational performance, stress reactions,
attachment, and coping behaviour provide insights into the psychological
aspect of their detention experience. The social realm encompasses their
interpersonal relationships and the effects these have directly or indirectly
on them. People within the childs proximal asylum-seeking context
at various points in time may include siblings, peers, neighbours, community
members, people smugglers, government officials, fellow asylum seekers,
detention officers, custodial officers and doctors. It should be kept
in mind that, in many cultures, the family unit does not comprise the
nuclear family, but constitutes a rich extended family whose role it is
to aid in the inculcation of the traditions and belief systems specific
to that ethnic group. Consistent with a temporal framework of before,
during and after detention, the inter-relational experiences of children
in immigration detention may revolve around: separation, estrangement,
grief, trauma, loss, or death prior to seeking asylum; separation, uncertainty,
abuse, violence, anger, conflict, fear, prejudice, cultural and individual
disempowerment, trauma and grief when in detention; and then possibly
trauma, fear, anxiety, grief, estrangement, loss, separation, reunion,
poverty, depowerment and cultural and social displacement following detention.
Many families and individuals become destitute through experiences that
lead to displacement and asylum seeking. Their social status and place
in a familiar cultural, economic and social network are eroded. Impoverishment
and destitution can lead to exploitation, and children of families currently
in detention may face this socio-economic risk in future if appropriate
interventions at a social and political level are not implemented. The
postpersecution environment is considered critical in preventing the intensification
of any trauma experienced by children (Lubben, 1996).
From an integrated
ecological perspective, the key to determining the effect of acute and
chronic trauma and stress on a child suffering the consequences of disaster
or conflict is contingent on five interactive factors:
- a child's psychobiological
composition and emotional resources;
- the reaction of
parents and caregivers to a threatening event and the subsequent disruption
this may cause to the family unit;
- the breakdown
of a sense of community and community networks;
- the ameliorating
effects of cultural, historical and political factors; and
- the occurrence,
duration, intensity and level of trauma, disaster or conflict (Elbedour,
ten Bensel & Bastien, 1993).
When the world of
a child breaks down to the extent that the child experiences a fear of
separation from significant others, a diminished sense of a secure base,
an unhelpful socio-cultural milieu, broken rules, a fragmented societal
structure, and a loss of meaning, then more than likely dysfunctional
psychological reactions and regressive developmental behaviour will emerge.
Support for this model of understanding children's reactions to traumatic
events has been consistently demonstrated by research examining the psychological
functioning of children and families around the world who have suffered
trauma in the face of conflict and disaster. For example, Hunter (1988)
found that if mothers were able to function during stressful periods of
family disruption, then the children tended to cope adequately. Prior
to this, Kinzie, Sack, Angell, Manson and Rath (1986), in an assessment
of Cambodian refugee children, found that children who were able to re-establish
family contact did better than those who did not, highlighting the importance
of a childs family as a buffer or neutralizing factor for severe
trauma. It is important to note that being alone or in a foster fa mily
exacerbated the perception of disaster for that particular group of children.
In a much earlier study, Silber, Perry and Bloch (1958) concluded that,
a child's response to a situation of acute stress may therefore
be determined not only by the intra-psychic phenomena but also by the
forces within the family social system of which he (sic) is a part.
(p. 167) Freud and Burlingham (1943) maintained that, although children
in the short term could survive war experiences reasonably well, provided
they were in the care of their mothers or a familiar mother substitute,
some years later many of the children experienced a sleeper effect
of delayed emotional difficulties.
Other research has
shown that alternative management of families seeking asylum can have
positive impacts on childrens adjustment. For example, Markowitz
(1996) described the situation of Bosnian Muslim refugees living in Israel
while awaiting placement. Although their future placement was unknown,
families seeking asylum were maintained as units and the head of the family
worked and provided for the family, thus avoiding dependence on authorities.
In that situation, parental roles and practices were sustained and the
sense of stability that prevailed while families were in limbo had positive
effects on childrens adjustment to their changing circumstances.
This model
provides an exemplar for an alternative approach to the detention of asylum
seekers in the Australian context.
Detention Threatens
the Bond Between Children and Significant Caregivers
The theory of Bowlby
(1969, 1973, 1980) that attachment behaviour serves to regulate proximity
between infants and their caregivers with attachment behaviour operating
as a system of regulation of distress associated with perceived threat
is widely accepted in psychology and other people professions. From this
perspective, the attachment system is activated when any phenomenon is
perceived as a threat. According to Sroufe and Waters (1977), caregivers
responsiveness and sensitivity to children's affective signals provide
a critical framework for children to organize their emotional experiences
and regulate their sense of security. Consequently, infants whose early
attachment needs have not been adequately met because of a disruption
to parents ability to regulate the attachment system efficiently,
are likely to maintain a view of the world that is comfortless and unpredictable,
and subsequently to develop relationships that are characterized by anxiety
or detachment (Drury-Hudson, 1994). Supporting this position, a recent
study conducted by Almqvist and Broberg (1999) that examined the mental
health and social adjustment of young refugee children in Sweden found
that the emotional wellbeing of mothers was a predictor of childrens
emotional wellbeing of children.
Aidukovic and Ajdukovic
(1993), Aidukovic and Ajdukovic (1998), Fox, Cowell and Montgomery (1994),
Ekblad (1993), Emmott (1996), Garbanino, Kostelny and Dubrow (1991b),
Hicks, Lalonde and Pepler (1993), and Miller (1996) all found that mothers
responses to (a) traumatic conditions prior to leaving their country of
origin, (b) their current refugee status, and (c) their future prospects
are major determinants of the coping skills of their children. Garbarino
et al. (l996) discussed the importance of home to a child
and what that entails. It incorporates the idea of a parent being in charge
of the family, permanence, safety and being surrounded with familiar and
personal things. In the detention centre environment, the concept of home
is significantly diminished. Over extended periods of time, this is likely
to have a marked impact on the development of familial and other social
bonds that underpin healthy identity, moral, and emotional development.
The Australian Psychological Society, therefore, considers that it is
paramount for children's experiences of detention to be considered in
light not only of their individual wellbeing but also of the wellbeing
of their proximal caregivers in detention. The extent to which the
physical and emotional well-being of the adult upon whom children depend
for nurturance and support is affected by their [the adults] experiences
can pose a particular risk for children (Oxford Refugee Centre,
2001).
Detention Limits
Elbedour, ten Bensel
and Bastian (1993) emphasized the role of formal schooling has as mitigating
influence in precarious situations. Schools can provide children with
an alternative security network, and therefore with physical and cognitive
developmental opportunities, and consistent and positive care. Structured,
routine opportunities for children to participate in a rich learning environment
in the company of peers within the confines of detention centres are considered
to be one of the minimal requirement of child care, if children are to
be detained at all. Opportunities to learn both in the language of origin
and in the language of the detention context should be provided in order
to facilitate childrens psychological sense of identity and place,
and their ability to adjust, cope and grow with adversity.
Detention Has
Traumatic Impacts on Child Detainees
There is limited
psychological research pertaining directly to the unique impact of mandatory
detention on children in Australia. However, it is possible to draw upon
two important sources of knowledge to inform this assessment of the impact
of current practices on the immigration detention of children: conceptual
models of trauma and empirical studies of the impact of trauma. These
conceptual models and empirical studies of trauma guide assessment and
prediction of the consequences of the current policies and practices pertaining
to child asylum seekers on their future mental health. Linear conceptual
models of trauma have been criticised as simplistic and failing to capture
the rich and diverse human experiences associated with extreme events
(Silove, 2000, p. 339). It is argued that culture and belief systems play
a significant role in mediating the impact of such events on the individual
in the community. The impact on children of adverse events is even more
complex. Silove (2000), whose research is highly regarded in Australia,
proposed a model for conceptualising trauma and its impact upon individuals
and communities. The model is based upon the notion that human reactions
to trauma are governed by the drive toward survival and psychosocial development.
Silove adopted an adaptive focus that recognises the restorative capacities
of trauma-affected individuals and their communities. According to his
model, under certain circumstances exposure to adverse situations may
result in a process of transformation resulting in exceptional achievements.
Siloves model
is based on five hypothetical constructs for conceptualising trauma and
response to trauma: safety; attachment; identity and role; justice; and
existential meaning (Silove, 2000). Two dimensions of his model, the safety
system and the attachment-bonding system, are particularly salient when
considering the impact of detention on the mental health of child asylum
seekers.
Judgements about
childrens safety needs by necessity occur within a context. The
context of mandatory detention of child asylum seekers in Australia is
that their experience has generally evolved over several defined phases:
the period of threat in their country of origin, the time of flight and
seeking asylum in Australia and the period of incarceration in the detention
centre. The very nature of their experience of detention undermines their
sense of safety and may contribute to a sense of ongoing danger, thus
detracting from their recuperative capacities. Bowlby postulated that
the attachment-bonding system is the result of a drive to form attachments
and that the drive to maintain interpersonal bonds is phylogenetically
determined (Bowlby, as cited by Silove, 2000). Silove has suggested that
the separations and losses experienced by refugees are multiple in nature,
and include both actual and symbolic losses. The very process of detaining
an unaccompanied child asylum seeker, in particular, disrupts the childs
interpersonal bonds with potential longterm carers in the community. The
experience of incarceration is arguably a very significant breach
of trust resulting in the loss of a sense of belonging, and undermining
future opportunities for social cohesion within the broader community.
A number of theorists support the importance of attachment in positive
human development and the potential long-term consequences of ruptures
to bonds in effecting adult mental health. The situation is exacerbated
in asylum seekers in terms of the grief resulting from the losses incurred
by the young person, including the loss of culture or cultural bereavement
(Eisenbruch, 1991).
This brief overview
of a model for trauma provides a framework for understanding the impact
of mandatory detention upon the psychological wellbeing of children in
detention. There is little direct evidence, to date, on the impact of
detention centre experiences on adults or children, and some of that evidence
is equivocal. There is more evidence pertaining to the impact of conflict
upon individuals. A rigorous epidemiological study undertaken by Mollica,
Donelan, Tor, Lavelle, Elias, Frankel and Blendon (1993) investigated
the prevalence of Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in Cambodian residents
living in camps on the Thai border. They reported that 15% of the residents
sampled suffered from PTSD, even though the majority of participants in
the study had experienced multiple war related traumas. Similarly, displaced
persons who had fled persecution in Bhutan and were living in camps in
Nepal evidenced low rates of PTSD, i.e., 14% who were tortured versus
4% who we not tortured (Shrestha, et al. 1998). A related study indicated
a 9% rate of PTSD for Vietnamese refugees entering Norway (Hauff &
Vauglum, 1993). These figures may be compared with the lifetime prevalence
rate for PTSD in the general population in the USA, which is 8% (Kessler,
Sonnega, Bromet, Hughes, & Nelson, 1995). Figures on PTSD rates for
the general community in Australia show its incidence as 3.3% (McLennan,
1997). These findings suggest the need for caution in drawing a direct
link between traumatic experiences and the long-term impact of trauma
on mental health and psychosocial functioning.The impact of detention
on children who have already been exposed to cultural dislocation and
trauma may result in a more diverse range of symptoms than those included
in the PTSD diagnosis. Potential symptom profiles include evidence of
depression, somatisation, anxiety, panic attacks, separation anxiety,
pathological anger, and dysthymia including lack of motivation. In contrast
to the relatively optimistic outcomes described above, Suurander (1998)
undertook a study of 46 unaccompanied refugee minors awaiting placement
in an asylum centre in Finland. Utilising a methodology that included
a broader definition of emotional and behavioural problems
he reported that the children experienced a number of losses, separations,
persecution and threats, which were not dissimilar to the experience of
children who are arriving in Australia. He also reported that approximately
50% of the sample was functioning in the clinical or borderline range
while younger children (under 15 years of age) evidenced more severe psychiatric
problems. Ajdukovic and Ajdukovic (1993) who studied the psychosocial
adaptation of refugee children to displacement reported that children
placed in a collective shelter had a higher risk of mental unwellness
than children placed with host families. Stressrelated reactions, including
sleeping and eating disorders, separation fears, and withdrawal and aggression,
were evident among the displaced children. Significantly, children exhibited
a significantly higher incidence of stress reactions if their mothers
had difficulty coping with the stress of displacement.
The impact of detention
on parental figures, who are the traditional care givers of
children, has already been outlined in this paper. Added to the sense
of parental absence and/or perceived depowerment, children in detention
centres are victims of absent or dislocated social networks. Children
are separated from immediate and extended family, which may contribute
to the perpetuation of psychiatric symptoms. In an 18-month follow- up
study of Vietnamese refugees resettled in the USA, Hinton, et al. (1993)
reported that pre- migration trauma variables were less powerful predictors
of persisting depression than demographic variables including age and
English language proficiency. The practice of mandatory detention can
have a particularly pernicious impact on competencies such as English
proficiency and related acculturative skills which, in turn, will impact
adversely upon the young persons sense of wellbeing and future capacity
to integrate into his or her adopted culture. Detention Reduces Childrens
Potential for Recovery from Trauma It is important in any contemporary
psychological framework for children's development to consider psychological
vulnerability and the associated capacity to recover from developmental
setbacks. There are a number of resilience, or recovery, factors that
serve to minimize developmental risk and prevent further psychological
harm, whilst at the same time providing protective scaffolding for childhood
socialization, which have been shown to be important in determining developmental
outcomes. Three main models of resilience exist that, together, have contributed
to a better understanding of the healthy psychological development of
children (Garmezy, Masten & Tellegen, 1984):
- The compensatory
model that emphasizes compensatory factors which neutralize exposure
to risk, such as an active approach to solving problems or the ability
to gain the positive attention of others;
- The challenge
model that focuses on the successful engagement of stress and embraces
the idea that a moderate risk factor could act as a potential enhancer
for successful adaptation; and
- The protective
factor model that operates indirectly with a risk factor to reduce the
probability of a negative outcome, such as a more highly developed cognitive
ability or a better quality of parenting.
Children who have
been displaced and/or who are detained in Australian detention centres
have been exposed to a number of cumulative risk factors, which makes
them particularly vulnerable and less resilient. Protective factors that
may serve to strengthen their capacity to meet the demands of their environment
are scarce under such circumstances. Usual and regular social opportunities
such as peer socialization, play, sport, interactive leisure activity,
regular classroom activity, creative pursuits, and opportunities to develop
independence and resourcefulness are important prerequisites for children's
normal development, but they are provided in limited and irregular fashion
in detention centres. Greater access to these social opportunities, and
expansion of the range of opportunities available for children can help
to increase the protective mechanisms and build resilience. It is important
to recognise that cultural as well as individual differences exist in
the operation of protective and risk factors in the detention environment.
A study by Rousseau, Drapeau and Corin (1998) of school-age refugee children
from Southeast Asia and Central America confirmed the importance of taking
cultural differences into consideration. When considering resilience from
a psychosocial perspective, it is important also to consider the role
of meanings assigned to difficult life events. Genero (1995) maintained
that meaning derived through mutual relationships is a critical source
of personal validation because the concepts of meaning and validation
are socially and culturally defined. Mutual participation in relationships
give meaning to the adaptive processes that arise in response to environmental
demands and challenges over time (O'Leary, 1998, p.436). With this
in mind, it is arguable not only that children's needs are severely compromised
by displacement and detention, but also that their parents psychological
needs are also compromised, which further reduces childrens recuperative
capabilities, making them less resilient in the face of hardship (Garbanino,
Kostelny, & Dubrow, 1991a). Garbarino et al. (1996) added a further
caution that the concerns of parents in refugee camps at times may lead
to stricter disciplinary measures being implemented in an attempt to exert
some sort of control over their lives and sense of protection for their
children. Strict disciplinary action is not consistent with development
of resilience.
Detention Exacerbates
Several studies have
investigated the role of mediating variables in the psychosocial adaptation
of refugees. In a study on the adjustment of unaccompanied Indochinese
refugee minors, Porte and Torney-Purta (1987) reported that the ongoing
presence of an adult of similar ethnic background appeared to mitigate
against the stress of adapting to a new country. Similarly, Vietnamese
children separated from their families and placed in a refugee camp demonstrated
increased emotional vulnerability (Harding & Looney, 1977). Studies
have consistently emphasised the role that ethnic origin and specific
pre- and post-migration contexts play in mediating the impact of protective
and risk factors on school-age refugee children (Ro usseau, Drapeau, &
Corin, 1998). In a sample of South American child refugees, family trauma
history was a principal determinant of symptoms whereas, in Southeast
Asian children, family variables such as family conflict and parental
depression contributed to increased symptomatology. These finding are
pertinent to the Australian context in which children are detained in
an environment which has been described as promoting parental depression
(Sultan & OSullivan, 2001). Displacement and detention of children
may impact on immediate mental health, but exposure to extremely intense
stressors can have delayed effects and cause difficulties in psychosocial
functioning in adulthood. Ajdukovic and Ajdukovic (1998) interviewed displaced
mothers and children in a refugee centre in Croatia over a period of 3
years. Their findings confirmed that while the incidence of stress-related
reactions in children decreases over time, the support provided by the
family was highly significant in assisting children to cope with the prolonged
stressed associated with displacement. Beiser, Dion, Gotowiec, Hyman and
Vu (1996), in a major review on migrant childrens adaptation and
mental health in Canada, acknowledge the equivocal findings in research
with asylum seekers and refugees. They criticised the simplistic understanding
of the dimensions of adaptation of migrant and displaced children, and
pointed out instead the need to focus on both casual risk factors and
protective factors for assessing the impact of migration and detention
on childhood mental health. They also favoured measures of both mental
health deficits and assets. The research reviewed in this submission draws
attention to factors associated with the detention of children and mental
health deficits. Conventional wisdom suggests that the current practice
of detention of unaccompanied children and children in the company of
their parent fails, at the very least, to contribute to the assets of
children and to their potential for integration into the Australian or
any other community, irrespective of their mental health outcome.
Implications for
the Wider Australian Community
The potential psychological
costs of the policy of mandatory detention on the psychological well-being
of children who are already coping with all the other negative experiences
which resulted in their decision to flee their country of birth and seek
asylum in Australia is arguably exacerbated by the system of mandatory
detention. The possible consequences that have been outlined above focus
on the negative sequelae of detention for individuals, but there are also
possible negative consequences for communities at large. Many of the children
may eventually be awarded refugee status and will settle in Australia.
The adverse consequences of detention outlined above will continue after
release into the community and, in turn, have at least four interrelated
and serious long-term consequences for Australia.
First, any mental
health problems that develop as a result of experiences in detention centres
will place an additional burden on health and other social services once
children enter the community. Even if detention itself does not traumatize
children, the lack of early treatment of the traumatic experiences of
war, displacement and flight is likely to exacerbate the negative consequences
of that trauma (Sourander, 1998). Such disturbances can be trans-generational
and hence the societal consequences can be very long term. A second likely
consequence for society at large is that disruption of psychological development
is likely to impact on the childs education and intellectual development
and thus potentially reduce the future value of these children in the
workforce and the community in general.
A third consequence
of detaining children in detention centres is in the form of potential
for an increase in future anti-social behaviour and its associated financial
and social costs to Australias systems of administrative and criminal
justice. Garbarino (1996; Garbarino et al., 1991) suggested that growing
up in refugee camps can stunt moral growth. One parent housed in a Hong
Kong camp commented, It is difficult to teach children right from
wrong here, because the conditions are so mixed. We cannot control the
conditions the children grow up in and what they see (Comerford
et al., 1991, p. 90), while another commented, They will lose the
ability to oppose wrong things in their lives and will only know how to
be ordered. (Comerford et al., p. 81). From a societal perspective
it is desirable that future Australian residents have well developed moral
belief systems because delayed moral development carries with it the potential
for increased antisocial behaviour.
Finally, if people
who have been detained in the camps feel that they have been mistreated,
they may become resentful and antagonistic towards the source of that
treatment, which in this case would be the State. Obviously it is not
in the interests of the wider Australian community to have a group of
people who are alienated and disaffected. This, and the other consequences
listed above could, either individually or collectively, contribute to
the development of a youth sub-culture with few legitimate outlets or
opportunities, and few cultural and social resources to assist with identity
formation that is consistent with pro-social values. Such problems are
self-perpetuating and are seriously detrimental to Australian society
in the longer term In a more immediate timeframe, research has shown that
such an accumulation of risks has a negative impact on psychological development
(Ajdukovic & Ajdukovic, 1998; Sameroff, Seifer, & Bartko, 1997),
and in the detention centres and refugee camps there is the potential
for a number of major risk factors for children to be compounded. These
include untreated prior traumatic events, dysfunctional parenting, depression,
inadequate educational and developmental opportunities, and lack of appropriate
role models, all of which, in isolation and in combination, have a serious
impact on childrens future wellbeing.
Detention Raises
Unanswered Questions and Concerns
The challenge for
those persons and organisations charged with a humanitarian duty of care
of child asylum seekers and their families is to understand and facilitate
healthy developmental opportunities to which all children are entitled.
The Australian Psychological Societys categorically condemns the
practice of detaining child asylum seekers and their families, on the
grounds that it does not appear to be commensurate with psychological
best practice concerning childrens development and mental health
and wellbeing. Detention of children in this fashion is also arguably
a violation of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. However,
in the absence of any indication from the Australian Government that it
intends to alter the practice of holding children in immigration detention,
the Australian Psychological Societys intermediate position is that
facilitation of both short-term and long-term psychological development
and wellbeing of children is the basic tenet upon which detention centres
should be audited and judged. Based on that position, the Society has
identified a series of questions and concerns that arise directly from
the various psychological perspectives that have been brought to bear
on estimating the effects of detention on child asylum seekers. The Society
argues that, because these questions and concerns relate specifically
to improvement and maintenance of child detainees educational, social
and psychological wellbeing, they are legitimate matters for the Inquiry
to consider and investigate.
- What steps are
currently being taken to monitor the psychological welfare of the children
in detention? In particular, what steps are being taken to monitor the
psychological wellbeing of children arriving from war-torn countries?
- What qualifications
and training do staff who care for children and their families in detention
centres have? What knowledge do they have of psychological issues faced
by people who have been subjected to traumatic experiences and are suffering
high degrees of anxiety, stress and uncertainty?
- What provisions
have been made for psycho-educational assessment of childrens
specific learning needs prior to their attending formal educational
programmes?
- What provisions
have been made for the psychotherapeutic treatment of children who are
suffering chronic and/or vicarious trauma as a result of witnessing
threatening behaviour whilst in detention?
- What provisions
have been made for families who have been seriously affected by the
asylum experience to participate in family therapy?
- What critical
incident debriefing procedures are in place for children who have witnessed
their parents, other family members, or social acquaintances engaging
in acts of self-harm or being harmed while in detention? What psychotherapeutic
support is in place for children who themselves have been harmed or
have engaged in self- harmful acts while in detention?
- What provisions
are in place for parenting programmes that provide support for parents
of children under extremely difficult psychological and physical circumstances?
- What efforts are
being made to provide parents with the opportunity to model traditional
family roles for children, such as working to earn an income, meal preparation,
other household duties, etc.?
- What opportunities
are in place for the assessment of safety issues such as bullying, and
sexual or physical abuse of children or their mothers in detention centres?
- How are resources
distributed to children and families in detention centres?
- What socialization
opportunities are available either within detention centres or in the
wider community for children to develop skills and independence, engage
in social activities, participate in cultural traditions, and communicate
and interaction with same-age peers and adults from similar ethnic and
religious backgrounds?
- What access do
children and families have to videos, music and entertainment from their
cultures of origin?
- What provisions
are in place to ensure the maintenance of privacy in a manner commensurate
with usual cultural practice?
- What is the Governments
rationale for continuing to implement a policy of mandatory detention
of child asylum seekers that on the face of it is likely to have a pernicious
impact on these childrens mental health?
- In view of the
evidence on the potential long-term impact of mandatory detention on
children, what processes may be followed by Government to avoid such
a practice and, more importantly, to develop policies and practices
that will have a positive impact on child asylum seekers psychological
development and mental health?
1. Prepared on Behalf
of the Australian Psychological Society Ltd. by Amanda Allan MAPS, Graham
Davidson FAPS, Graham Tyson MAPS, Robert Schweitzer MAPS, and Rosemary
Starr MAPS. Endorsed by the Board of Directors of the Australian Psychological
Society Ltd. ABN 23 000 543 788 on 12 April 2002.
References
Abramson,
L. Y., Seligman, M. E. P., & Teasdale, J. (1978). Learned helplessness
in humans: Critique and reformulation. Journal of Abnormal Psychology,
87, 49- 74.
Adjukovic, M., &
Adjukovic, D. (1993). Psychological wellbeing of refugee children.
Child Abuse and Neglect,
17, 843-854.
Adjukovic, M., &
Adjukovic, D. (1998). Impact of displacement on the psychological wellbeing
of refugee children. International Review of Psychiatry, 10, 186-195.
Almqvist, K., &
Broberg, A.G. (1999). Mental health and social adjustment in young refugee
children 3.5 years after their arrival in Sweden. Journal of the American
Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 38, 723-728.
Amnesty International
(2001). Defending childrens human rights: Children in immigration
detention in Australia. Downloaded from http://www.amnesty.org.au/whatshappening/hrd4-5.html.
Bandura, A. (1977).
Social learning theory. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall.
Baron, R.A., &
Richardson, D.R. (1994). Human aggression (2nd ed.). New York: Plenum.
Baumeister, R. F.
(1998). The self. In D.T. Gilbert, S.T. Fiske, & G. Lindzey (Eds.),
The handbook of social psychology (4th ed., Vol 1, pp. 680-740). New York:
McGraw-Hill.
Beiser, M., Dion,
R., Gotowiec, A., Hyman, I., & Vu, N. (1996). Immigrant and refugee
children in Canada. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 40 (2), 67-72.
Bernard van Leer
Foundation. (2001). The convention of the rights of the child and young
children, Early Childhood Matters, 98.
Bowlby, J. (1969).
Attachment and loss: Attachment (Vol.1). New York: Basic Books
Bowlby, J. (1973).
Attachment and loss: Separation, anxiety and danger (Vol. 2). New York:
Basic Books
Bowlby, J. (1980).
Attachment and loss: Loss (Vol.3). New York: Basic Books
Burns, M. O., &
Seligman, M. E. P. (1991). Explanatory style, helplessness, and depression.
In C. R. Snyder, & D. R. Forsyth (Eds.), Handbook of social and clinical
psychology (pp. 267284). New York: Pergamon Press Comerford, S.A.,
Armour-Hileman, V.L. & Waller, S.R. (1991). Defenceless in detention.
Vietnamese children living amid increased violence in Hong Kong. Hong
Kong: Refugee Concern Hong Kong.
Cooley-Quille, M.,
Turner, S., & Beidel, D. (1995). Emotional impact of childrens
exposure to community violence: A preliminary study. Journal of American
Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 34, 1362-1367.
Downey, G., &
Coyne, J.C. (1990). Children of depressed parents: An integrative review.
Psychological Bulletin, 108, 50-76.
Drury-Hudson, J.
(1994). Some effects of attachment disturbance on child behaviour. Children
Australia, 19, 17 22.
Eisenbruch, M. (1991).
From post-traumatic stress disorder to cultural bereavement: Diagnosis
of South East Asian refugees. Social Science and Medicine, 33, 673-680.
Ekblad, S. (1993).
Psychosocial adaptation of children while housed in a Swedish refugee
camp: Aftermath of the collapse of Yugoslavia. Stress Medicine, 9, 159-166.
Elbedour, S., ten
Bensel, R., & Bastien, D.T. (1993). Ecological integrated model of
children of war: Individual and social psychology. Child Abuse & Neglect,
17, 805-819.
Emmott, S. (1996).
Gender and Development, 4, 31-38.
Eth, S., & Pynoos,
R.S. (Eds.) (1985). Post-traumatic stress disorder in children. Washington,
DC.: American Psychiatric Press.
Fox, I. (2002, March
9). Centres worse than prison: Refugee critical of system. Western Advocate,
p. 2.
Fox, P.G., Cowell,
J.M., & Montgomery, A.C. (1994). The effects of violence on health
and adjustment of Southeast Asian refugee children: An integrative review.
Public Health Nursing,
11, 195-201.
Freud, A., &
Burlingham, D.T. (1943). War and children. London, UK: Medical War Books.
Garbarino, J., (1996).
Developmental consequences of living in dangerous and unstable environments:
The situation of refugee children. In: M. McCallin (Ed.), The psychological
wellbeing of refugee children: Research, practice and policy issues (pp.
1-20). Geneva: ICCB.
Garbarino, J., Kostelny,
K., & Dubrow, N. (1991). What children can tell us about living in
danger. American Psychologist, 46, 376-383.
Garmezy, N., Masten,
A.S., & Tellegen, A. (1984). The study of stress and competence in
children: A building block for deve lopmental psychopathology. Child Development,
55, 97-111.
Genero, N.P. (1995).
Culture, resiliency, and mutual psychological development. In H.I.
McCubbin, E.A. Thompson,
A.I. Thompson, & J.A Futrell (Eds.), Resiliency in ethnic minority
families (pp. 31-48). Madison: The University of Wisconsin System.
Haney, C., Banks,
W.C., & Zimbardo, P.G. (1973). A study of prisoners and guards in
a simulated prison. Naval Research Review, 30, 4-17.
Harding, R.K., &
Looney, J.G. (1977). Problems of Southeast Asian children in a refugee
camp. American Journal of Psychiatry, 134, 407-411.
Hart, D., Atkins,
R., & Ford, D. (1998). Urban America as a context for the development
of moral identity in adolescence. Journal of Social Issues, 54, 513-530.
Hauff, E., &
Vaglum, P. (1993). Vietnamese boat refugees: The influence of war and
flight traumatisation on mental health on arrival in the country of resettlement:
A community cohort study of Vietnamese refugees in Norway. Acta Psychiatrica
Scandinavica, 88, 113-122.
Hicks, R., Lalonde,
R.N., & Pepler, D. (1993). Psychosocial considerations on mental health
of immigrant and refugee children. Canadian Journal of Community Mental
Health, 12, 71-87.
Hinton, W. L., Chen,
Y.C., Du, N., Tran, C. G., Lu, F. G., Miranda, J., & Faust, S. (1993).
DSM-III-R disorders in Vietnamese refugees: Prevalence and correlates.
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 185, 39-45.
Hunter, E.J. (1988).
Long-term effects of parental wartime captivity on children: Children
of POW and MIA servicemen. Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy, 18,
312-328.
Kessler, R. C., Sonnega,
A., Bromet, E., Hughes, M., & Nelson, C. B. (1995).
Posttraumatic stress
disorder in the national comorbidity survey. Archives of General Psychiatry,
52, 1048-1060.
Kinston, S., &
Rosser, R. (1974). Disaster: Effects on mental and physical state. Journal
of Psychosomatic Research, 18, 437-456.
Kinzie, J.D., Sack,
W.H., Angell, R.H., Manson, S., & Rath, B., (1986). The psychiatric
effects of massive trauma on Cambodian children. The Childrens Journal
of the American Academy of Child Psychiatry, 25, 370-376.
Lubben, S. (1996).
The children in exile: Struggle in assisting persecuted children.
Refuge, 15, 1-3.
Markowitz, F. (1996).
Living in Limbo: Bosnian Muslim refugees in Israel. Human Organization,
55, 127-132.
McCallin, M.(1992).
Living in detention: A review of the psychological wellbeing of Vietnamese
children in the Hong Kong detention centres. Geneva: International Catholic
Child Bureau.
McCallin, M. (1993).
The psychosocial wellbeing of Vietnam minors in the Philippines: A comparison
with Hong Kong. Geneva: International Catholic Child Bureau.
McLennan, W. (1997).
Mental health and wellbeing: Profile of adults, Australia. Canberra, ACT:
Australian Bureau of Statistics.
Mikulincer, M. (1994).
Human learned helplessness: A coping perspective. New York: Plenum.
Miller, K.E. (1996).
The effects of state terrorism and exile on indigenous Guatemalan refugee
children: A mental health assessment and an analysis of childrens
narratives. Child Development, 67, 89-106.
Mollica, R.F., Donelan,
K., Tor, S., Lavelle, J., Elias, C., Frankel, M., & Blendon, R.J.
(1993). The effect of trauma and confinement on functional health and
mental health status of Cambodians living in Thailand-Cambodia border
camps.
Journal of Nervous
and Mental Disease, 270, 581-586.
OLeary, V.E.
(1998). Strength in the face of adversity: Individual and social thriving.
Journal of Social Issues, 54, 425-446.
Ollendick, D.G.,
& Hoffman, M. (1982). Assessment of psyc hological reactions in disaster
victims. Journal of Community Psychology, 10, 157-167.
Oxford Refugee Centre
(2001). Understanding the psychosocial needs of refugee children and adolescents:
What do we mean by psychosocial? The Refugee Experience Website, downloaded
from http://earlybird.qeh.ox.ac.ukrfgexp/rsp_tre/student/children/cld_02.htm
Porte, Z., &
Torney-Purta, J. (1987). Depression and academic achievement among Indochinese
refugee unaccompanied minors in ethnic and non-ethnic placements. American
Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 57 (4), 536-47.
Rousseau, C., Drapeau,
A., & Corin, E. (1998). Risk and protective factors in Central American
and Southeast Asian refugee children. Journal of Refugee Studies, 11 (1),
20-37.
Rutter, M. (1972).
Maternal deprivation reassessed. London: Penguin.
Rutter, M. (1981).Stress,
coping and development: Some issues and some questions.
Journal of Child
Psychiatry, 22, 323-356
Sameroff, A.J., Seifer,
R., & Bartko, W. T. (1997). Environmental perspectives on adaptation
during childhood and adolescence. In S. Luthar, J.A. Burack, D.
Cicchetti, &
J.R. Weisz, (Eds.). Developmental psychopathology: Perspectives on adjustment,
risk, and disorder (pp. 507-526). New York: Cambridge University Press.
Shrestha, N. M.,
Sharma, B., Van Ommeren, M., Regmi, S., Makaju, R., Kamproe, I.,Sheshtha,
G.B., & deJong, J.T. (1998). Impact of torture on refugees displaced
within the developing world. Journal of American Medical Association,
280, 443-448.
Silber, E., Perry,
S., & Bloch, I. (1958). Patterns in parent-child interaction in disaster.
Psychiatry, 21, 159-167.
Silove, D. (2000).
A conceptual framework for mass trauma: Implications for adaptation, intervention
and debriefing. In B. Raphael, & J. P. Wilson (Eds.), Psychological
debriefing: Theory, practice and evidence. (pp. 337-350). New York: Cambridge
University Press.
Silove, D., Steel,
Z., & Watters, C. (2000). Policies of deterrence and the mental health
of asylum seekers. Journal of American Medical Association, 284 (5), 604-
611.
Sourander, A. (1998).
Behaviour problems and traumatic events of unaccompanied refugee minors.
Child Abuse and Neglect, 22, 719-727.
Sroufe, L.A., &
Waters, E. (1977). Attachment as an organizational construct. Child Development,
48, 1184-1199.
Sultan, A., &
OSullivan, K. Psychological disturbances in asylum seekers held
in longterm detention: A participant-observer account. Medical Journal
of Australia, 175, 593-596.
Watson, D. (1996).
Individuals and institutions: The case of work and employment. In M. Wetherall
(Ed.), Identities, groups and social issues (pp. 239-298). London: Sage.
Last
Updated 9 January 2003.