Sunday, November 27, 2011

Students Express Concerns at Youth Forum

International students and job security were the main issues discussed at a youth forum at Monash University this week (April 2011).

The Your Community youth forum was held as part of the One World Week. This is a multicultural festival that began at a university in England but is now also held at Monash University.

The theme for the forum was “The Young Mind and What Plagues It”. Topics discussed included Employment, University, Health, Culture and Personal Security.

The forum was run by the Golden Key Monash University Chapter (GKMU).

The event was hosted by Lloyd England, Student Experience Manager and law tutor at Monash University.

GKMU Executive Community Service Officer Matt Malishev said the event was not a standard question-answer format, “There was good discussion going, that’s what we wanted”.

Dr Holt, Director of International Education and Research at Monash University, said that most youth issues are the same regardless of culture.

Student Jason raised the issue of cultural clusters. Opinions varied between the generations.

While an older lady said that her parents would not let her play with people from other cultures, a female student said that her mother forced to play with others in order to improve her language skills.

One female student said she saw everyone as being Aussie and had enough of people referring to a person’s nationality.

International students also voiced the concern that it was getting harder to find work because employers preferred workers that had permanent residency.

Mr Guimaraes, Founder of the Asia-Pacific Youth Organisation, said that it was important to start searching for work as soon as you arrive in Australia.

Dr Holt added that it was important to let employers know what makes you unique.

Mr Malishev was pleased that one question could start a whole discussion, “The aim was to integrate international students with local students and I think we achieved that”.

Student Andy Hwang was concerned about the expectations being placed by family, friends and society to perform. He wanted to know if there was really a need to fulfil these commitments.

Mr Lester, Senior Counselor for Health and Wellbeing at Monash University said that the pressure to meet expectations was a social construct that you can choose not to buy into.

“Learning is done over a lifetime and not all of it has to be done now” he said.

GKMU president Nicola Giarratana rebutted, saying that lectures expected students to have read everything before class.

She also said that it was part of Monash University expectations that students complete 40 hours of study a week and 20 hours of paid work plus community service.

The event has been declared a success.

Mr Malishev would definitely hold the event again, “We are going to expand it, it going to be bigger and better”.

Golden Key is an international honour society that invites students to become members when they achieve certain academic standing. They have chapters worldwide that hold events and rise money for charity.

HAM430 Feature Story: Should They Come?

There is no doubt that immigration and asylum seekers are one of biggest issues in Australia in the past decade. Either a new boatload of refugees has arrived or there is a protest at a detention centre. Some people saying that asylum seekers are not treated well, and others saying they are living in hotels getting everything for free. Australia has been built on immigration but times have changed. Is it still worth trying to become an Australian?

The book From All Corners (1993, Anne Henderson, Allen & Unwin) presents the stories of six people who migrated to Australia in the mid-20th century. The common thread between the people in the book was that they came to Australia with little. They had come from a place affected by war or political upheaval. They worked hard at their family business until they earned themselves a comfortable living.

A person to come to Australia in the 1969 was Cornelia Tuyau. She was born in Holland in 1956. She came by ship on what she describes as a six week “holiday” paid for by the Australian government. “We had the impression that when we came here kangaroos would be running around through the suburbs, koala bears would be climbing up the trees in front yard, it was a bit of a culture shock when we came here and it was nothing like that at all.”

Strikes in Perth and Melbourne delayed the journey. When they finally arrived on shore they were put on buses and sent to a hostel in Murrumbeena. The family stayed in the hostel for six weeks. Each person was given a spoon, fork and cup. The family were put in huts that looked like tin cans, they shared with another family. There were just beds in the room. No radio or TV. They used a communal toilet and showers. Not use to Australian food, they were hungry all the time. Milk and eggs were rationed.

Her father was sent to Yallourn to help build a power plant, but there was a strike and workers were sent back to the hostel. Her father then got a job with the post office. He wanted to work on the railways like in he did in Holland but the hostel rent cost more than the wage. Cornelia did not attended school during her stay in Hostel.

Stella Hennequin came to Australia from Mauritius in 1972. They had to pay for their journey by ship. Her mother and six children were entitled to government benefits and were given tutors to learn English. “The Australian mentality of giving everyone a fair go, that is what we were offered back then,” Stella says.

According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), there are about 9 million refugees worldwide. Of this there is an average of 3500 asylum seekers coming to Australia each year. According to QC Julian Burnside, it would take 20 years to fill the MCG. In contrast the amount of migrants each year is about 350,000.

QC Julian Burnside said there are three types of refugee. The first type is from refugee camps overseas. The Australian government selects a 13,500 each year to come to Australia. The second group is people who come to Australia on business, student or holiday visas and apply for protection when they get here. They are allowed to stay in community until a decision is made. About 20 per cent of these are accepted as refugees. The third group are boat people without visas and are detained until they receive a visa. About 90 per cent of these are found to be refugees.

According to QC Julian Burnside, the majority have not committed any offence and are seeking protection from the Taliban. He says refugees are keen to enter the workforce and rebuild their lives. They risked a lot to come here.

In the book From All Corners one of the stories has an eerie similarity to current boat people stories. Nhung and Phi fled communist Vietnam in 1979 by sharing a fishing boat with about 25 people on board. The facilities were inadequate and after a few days the boat began to sink. They were rescued and put on an island off the coast of Malaysia. Here they were processed before they were allowed to come to Australia.

The book From Nothing to Zero (2003, Julian Burnside QC, Lonely Planet) paints a different picture to From All Corners. The book is a collection of letters written by people being held in detention centres. The detainees liken the centre to a prison. The rooms are bare and crowded. Most people just watch television all day and late into the night. They are put to work by the prison and given coupons to spend on items such as cigarettes and lollies from the detention centre store. There was a newsletter published by the detainees but this was stopped after it was determined that the content was too depressing. Detainees are woken up a few times a night for counting.

“One night a kangaroo came near the fence …. Who is the animal?” wrote one detainee.

Many have constant headaches which the nurses give paracetamol for. On the rare occasion that they are allowed to receive treatment in a hospital, they are handcuffed throughout their visit. A patient wrote “I felt I had lost my dignity …. In the hospital they thought I was a criminal.”

QC Julian Burnside says when in detention, they have all the support services available to people in jails. When detainees are released, they are left to take care of themselves and their physiological issues.

Youth worker Les Twentyman says immigrants require social and youth workers. Children need school supplies, especially those that came here with no parents. “There needs to be more resources for these people,” he says.

QC Julian Burnside became involved with asylum seekers in 2001. A Norwegian ship called Tampa rescued a sinking boat of refugees. Australia refused to let ship enter Australian waters. A friend found a legal theory to help the asylum seekers and asked QC Julian Burnside to run case. “It immediately became apparent to me that Australia was mistreating asylum seekers in a way that was completely unjustifiable.”

Support groups would contact QC Julian Burnside for help. “Between 2001 and 2006, everyone in detention seemed to have my mobile number,” he jokes. He created a strategic set of test cases to see if they could get the law changed.

Australia is a part of the 1951 Refugee Convention. A country signed to the convention is obliged to protect the rights of all people regardless of how they came to the country. Under the convention, if a country is not able to accept a refugee, they must arrange for them to live in another country.

Australian migration policy says non-citizens without a visa must be detained until they receive a visa or are deported. They do not know when they will be let out. “Even criminals convicted of the worst offences know how long they will spend inside,” says QC Julian Burnside. To grant a visa could take six months or six years. The longest was nine years. “Why is it necessary to hold people indefinitely while they are being assessed?”

A panel determines if a person is a refugee. If they decide no, then the person can go to an independent group for review, 50per cent of these review show the person is a genuine refugee. The case could then go to the high court.

The uncertainty drives asylum seekers mad. When the stress gets too much they either harm property or themselves. Examples include cutting themselves with razors and glass, setting fires and sewing lips together.

An Afghani detainee wrote, “Taliban killed people suddenly but this regime is killing people slowly.”

One case involved a man who had no country. The High Court agreed with the Government that the man could be held forever. “Pretty horrible thought,” Julian says.

Some people in detention have been determined to be refugees, so they cannot be sent to their home country. Meanwhile ASIO said they should not be in Australia due to security concerns, meaning they must stay in detention. It is unclear what these security concerns are. ASIO says no terrorists have come to Australia by boat. Julian says, “We treat them as monsters from Mars.”

Stella was not only an immigrant; she was an investigation officer for the ombudsman for 6 years. Stella says that there are more issues now than when she came to Australia so there are more rules and regulations. “Every case has its own story,” she says. Every decision is done case by case based on evidence. According to Stella, if you meet the criteria for immigration it is a straight forward process.

Stella now runs a foundation that provides support and advice for people in Mauritius who do not have access to treatment for cancer. The foundation liaises with immigration to help the patient obtain a visa to come to Australia.

Julian believes that John Howard’s comments of Australia deciding who will come into the country are correct in terms of migration policy. He believes though that it would totally wrong to apply this to refugees. “You have to be careful about grouping immigrants and refugees together,” he says.

We have a small amount of asylum seekers when compared with other countries. Pakistan and Iran get about two million asylum seekers a year because they are near the troubled countries.

The refugee convention was created to reduce the strain on neighbouring countries by allowing people to seek asylum in any country that is part of the convention. Unfortunately all the countries between Afghanistan and Australia are not a part of the convention. In Indonesia it could take up to 15 years to have a process claimed. During this time the asylum seeker is not allowed to work.

There seems to be a history of suspicion of foreigners throughout Australian history, just a different nationality depending on the era. The book From All Corners tells how, as Australia was at war with Germany, Jews that came from Germany had to prove their loyalty to Australia. Italians were watched carefully by police because Italy was an ally of Germany. People from enemy nations were not allowed to have cars, radios, telephones or cameras. Neighbours kept their distance during this time.

According to Les Twentyman, Immigrants feel alienated. Some are racially discriminated against. In high unemployment areas the migrants are blamed for taking the jobs.

What can be improved with the immigration system?

Stella believes that “information and communication should be foremost”. People have misguided expectations on what to expect in Australia. For example, international students are given 20 hours a week to work. Some then ask for government support. “That is not what the Australian government is about. They provide visas to people who said they are genuinely coming to study in Australia,” Stella says.

Julian believes we need to end the idea of indefinite mandatory detention. After initial health and security checks are done the refugees should be released until a decision is made. Detention on Christmas Island costs $1600 per person per day. Releasing asylum seekers into the community with Centrelink benefits would cost only a couple hundred dollars a week. “It is an amazing amount of money that we spend on traumatising a small amount of people,” Julian said.

What advice is there for people wanting to come to Australia? Cornelia says “Do it the legal way”. She believes coming by boat will just make it harder to be accepted.

If there is family in Australia that will sponsor the immigrant it is fairly easy to migrate to Australia.

People need to know that they will need money to support themselves. They will need to buy a car and rent is high in Australia. They need to find a social network. “You are not going to have five cars in the driveway and big two story mansion,” Stella says. She believes the system in Australia is not always the best but still better than many countries. There is social security and a good health system.

Julian says asylum seekers need to be prepared to face brutal treatment when they first arrive.

If refugees need to face brutal treatment before becoming citizens, is it really worth coming to Australia? “By large Australia is a decent and compassionate country”, says Julian. “Living in Australia is a whole lot better than living in the fear of the Taliban.”

The man with no state was eventually released and became an Australian citizen.

On coming Australia, Stella reflects “It was indeed the lucky country …. We can have everything we want if we work hard for it.”

Further Reading

Thursday, October 6, 2011

HAM433 Blog Response (Week 8)

There are many websites that provide videos for viewing have been around. The most successful would be YouTube, which has had a social aspect to it since the beginning. The integration with Google Plus has further enhanced YouTube’s social aspect.

One drawback to the adoption of the web as the main video platform is that, particularly in Australia, the Internet is too slow to have high definition video. It also has a high cost compared pay TV. Obviously the convergence of TV and Internet would work better if the video (download) came through the Television broadcast; with audience response (uploads) being sent through the Internet.

Another issue with the current regulations in Australia is that TV networks are not allowed to send data through their transmissions (“what’s on next” and subtitles allowed). Removing the restrictions would allow networks to transmit their own mini webpages showing news, recipes, traffic reports and other text information. Networks could cooperate so a different topic was covered by a different channel.

About 5 years ago the cricket broadcasts used to have player statistics that were viewable with certain set top boxes. Before that Channel 7 started broadcasting the Austext system in 1977. It uses the same technology that provides the subtitles for TV shows. This service provided “news, finance information, weather, lottery results, TV guide and other information” to a compatible TV. The service was ended because “Austext is a free service and does not attract advertising revenue, so this is not commercially viable”. I believe that the closing of the Austext service was a step backward.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

HAM433 Blog Response (Week 7)

I think that Channel 10 is taking a risk with this new nationwide news strategy. 90 minutes seems a bit long for the weekend. I also don’t know if people would miss having local news. The weirdest thing would be how they are dealing with the Perth time difference. I think it was good that 6pm with George Negus is on air. I think that it brings back some of the journalism that was lost on channel 7 and 9.

I find that Australians have a history of putting sports before anything else. I find it extremely annoying when a sports story appears in the first 15 minutes of the evening news. It should be left to the sports section. On the weekend there is not even an hourly news report on the radio, it becomes an hourly sports update. I suppose it is some kind of cost cutting. On an episode of the sketch TV show “Full Frontal”, the reporter of a satirical news sketch says “The winners of the AFL grand final were given a parade along Swanston Street with thousands of fans cheering from the sides. In other news, the scientist who discovered a cure for cancer gets a letter from his mother”.

This sport focus is unfortunate for other areas of importance such as the arts and science. There needs to be more shows on television for arts and science. There also needs to be a change in perception of what art is. Many see it as something for the rich or the older generation. I also think the ABC is thinking more business like then it used to. Therefore it is thinking about how to get more people to watch, rather how it promotes culture.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

HAM433 Blog Response (Week 6)

I am currently in the middle of reading Al Gore’s book “The Assault on Reason”. The book is focused on the US but much of it relates Australia. A main point of discussion in the book is that you need money to win an election. Therefore an independent candidate in a small town is unlikely to become president because they need money to pay for advertising. The most likely to win an election are those who are already millionaires or can get companies to invest in them. The election campaign becomes about who has the best commercials and who can get the most airtime. Once in power, the government then has to pay the media for advertising space using taxpayer’s money.

I think that political parties should get to advertise for free. There should be a law that if a political party makes an advertisement then the opposite party also gets equal time for advertising. There should also be a set amount of political ads per day.

I think that it is important that people get more interested in politics and world issues. The majority of people would just watch the evening news and many would have trouble answering general questions. People need to be encouraged to watch more current affairs. There also need to be more interactivity. Devices such as Tivo and Apple TV allow TVs to be connected the internet to download movies. This technology should be extended to allow people to have real-time conversations as they watch a show. Some movies on Blu-Ray already allow this.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

HAM433 Blog Response (Week 5): Social Media

It is amazing how rapidly the media is changing. In relation to spreading of information, social media is the best thing since the printing press. It is something anyone can get involved with, unlike TV and radio.

I do believe that it is important for people to become more aware of how the media works. They also need to gain skills in analysing what they read. This is because traditional media outlets have processes in place. In general, these processes ensure that the news is factually correct. Most journalists also follow a code of ethics and are bound by regulations. In contrast, social media does not follow the same rules. While having the positives of promoting freedom of expression, it also means that much that is written is actually opinion rather than fact. We all have to avoid the trap of taking everything at face value.

Unfortunately social media is not reaching everyone. For example, Facebook is banned in China. Facebook are currently in negotiations with the government to start a joint venture that will create an independent site just for China. Google also had a struggle with the Chinese government. Also, people in some developing nations are not able to afford the equipment needed. The infrastructure is also bad. This reminds me of when I had to learn about the digital divide in high school. The class had to look at the possibility of a future where people would be divided in to “have” and “have not”. Hopefully the laptop for every child initiatives will help.

Another group without access to social media would be the elderly. They are having difficulty adjusting. When my grandparents were children their house had no electricity and people were using horse and carts. This was in Western Europe! My Grandma will never own a computer.

Finally, I found Wikipedia’s social media aspect quite interesting. It would not normally be associated with Facebook and Twitter, but the articles are put there by anyone creates an account with them. One person might write the basics of an article, and then another person can add extra info. During the Japanese earthquakes earlier this year, there was already a page about the earthquake and it was constantly changing throughout the day. Even the “most deadly earthquakes” article was updated to reflect changes to the death toll. This makes Wikipedia a community based news service, using real people.

Sunday, September 4, 2011

HAM433 Week Four Blog Response: Convergence and Regulation

This is a comment to the article written in The Australian about regulation needing to catch up with current technology. Other comments can be found here.

I think that the film and game classification system should be extended to the internet. There are currently filter programs available for parent that can block sites not safe for kids. Unfortunately this relies on the developer of the software maintaining a list of unsafe sites. All websites in Australia should have a rating embedded in the page that can be read by the web browser. This way any Australian site can be self-censoring.

Another issue with website regulation is that the Internet is international. Only the country that the website host resides can remove an offensive site. Something that is legal in one country can be seen in a country where that content is illegal. In Australia the law varies in each state as to what happens when people view illegal material. Victorian law considers a crime to be committed in the place where person is viewing the material. Other regions believe the crime is committed in the place where the website is hosted.