
Arrival
Angela Costi’s poem considers how the stories of newly arrived people can be undermined by legal definitions, how Australia’s migration law is designed to keep them in a state of ‘arrival’.
Angela Costi’s poem considers how the stories of newly arrived people can be undermined by legal definitions, how Australia’s migration law is designed to keep them in a state of ‘arrival’.
Three years after violence in Myanmar forced more than 745,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee the country, many in Australia are still suffering the consequences of statelessness.
Joseph Gleeson takes us to the year 2035 or 2038, as the leader of the Refugee Council of Australia waits for the Prime Minister to finish speaking.
Through its repeal of the medevac legislation, Australia has taken our future and made it our demise, writes Shamindan Kanapadhi.
Under the Same Sky details the tragic story of Mojgan Shamsalipoor and Milad Jafari.
James Robertson-Hirst takes a journey across borders and wonders how much has really changed in this globalised world.
A new poem by Mark William Jackson puts us in the shoes of those fleeing war with few options of where to find a safe haven.
If asylum seekers can’t board a plane to Australia without a visa, they are forced to take dangerous sea journeys to find safety.
More to the Story expertly weaves together conversations with refugees with the historical and socio-political backdrops that have forced them to flee.
Good Muslim Boy by Osamah Sami is a well-written and entertaining memoir of one man’s journey from Iran to Australia, writes Samaya Borom.