“How Do We Put Him in the System?”: Client Construction at a Sport-Based Migrant Settlement Service in Melbourne, Australia

The empirical focus of this article is a sport-based settlement service targeting newly arrived migrants in Melbourne, Australia. This five-month study examines staff members’ everyday work routines with a focus on their participation in meetings and the production of documents. Embedded in the Aust...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jora Broerse
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2019-02-01
Series:Social Inclusion
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/1803
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spelling doaj-69e94c586095431dba8cd1b875a0a5cf2020-11-25T01:31:21ZengCogitatioSocial Inclusion2183-28032019-02-017123824710.17645/si.v7i1.1803972“How Do We Put Him in the System?”: Client Construction at a Sport-Based Migrant Settlement Service in Melbourne, AustraliaJora Broerse0Institute for Health and Sport, Victoria University, AustraliaThe empirical focus of this article is a sport-based settlement service targeting newly arrived migrants in Melbourne, Australia. This five-month study examines staff members’ everyday work routines with a focus on their participation in meetings and the production of documents. Embedded in the Australian immigration policy context, this article shows how staff members aim to empower clients while simultaneously falling back into stigmatising refugee/client identification through administrative practices. The results indicate that staffs’ everyday client constructions reinforce the othering and categorisation of ethnic minorities and support a reductionist deficit model of presenting clients. This may limit the opportunities for migrants to identify with and participate in wider Australian society and thus has the opposite effect of what governments and the sector aim to accomplish.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/1803Australiaclient constructionmigrant settlementpolicy designsport-for-development
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jora Broerse
spellingShingle Jora Broerse
“How Do We Put Him in the System?”: Client Construction at a Sport-Based Migrant Settlement Service in Melbourne, Australia
Social Inclusion
Australia
client construction
migrant settlement
policy design
sport-for-development
author_facet Jora Broerse
author_sort Jora Broerse
title “How Do We Put Him in the System?”: Client Construction at a Sport-Based Migrant Settlement Service in Melbourne, Australia
title_short “How Do We Put Him in the System?”: Client Construction at a Sport-Based Migrant Settlement Service in Melbourne, Australia
title_full “How Do We Put Him in the System?”: Client Construction at a Sport-Based Migrant Settlement Service in Melbourne, Australia
title_fullStr “How Do We Put Him in the System?”: Client Construction at a Sport-Based Migrant Settlement Service in Melbourne, Australia
title_full_unstemmed “How Do We Put Him in the System?”: Client Construction at a Sport-Based Migrant Settlement Service in Melbourne, Australia
title_sort “how do we put him in the system?”: client construction at a sport-based migrant settlement service in melbourne, australia
publisher Cogitatio
series Social Inclusion
issn 2183-2803
publishDate 2019-02-01
description The empirical focus of this article is a sport-based settlement service targeting newly arrived migrants in Melbourne, Australia. This five-month study examines staff members’ everyday work routines with a focus on their participation in meetings and the production of documents. Embedded in the Australian immigration policy context, this article shows how staff members aim to empower clients while simultaneously falling back into stigmatising refugee/client identification through administrative practices. The results indicate that staffs’ everyday client constructions reinforce the othering and categorisation of ethnic minorities and support a reductionist deficit model of presenting clients. This may limit the opportunities for migrants to identify with and participate in wider Australian society and thus has the opposite effect of what governments and the sector aim to accomplish.
topic Australia
client construction
migrant settlement
policy design
sport-for-development
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/1803
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