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migration
Books & arts
Border forces
Philippa Hawker
20 November 2024
Two powerful films, a documentary and a feature, offer urgent perspectives on people, place and power
Correspondents
Germany’s new normal
Klaus Neumann
1 October 2024
Why have Germans suddenly joined the far right in opposing immigrants?
National affairs
Peter Dutton’s road to nowhere
Peter Brent
28 August 2024
The opposition leader has an electorally ineffective obsession
National affairs
Poor at politics, strong on policy
Peter Mares
2 August 2024
Andrew Giles’s record as immigration minister stands up remarkably well
Books & arts
Distant crimes, nearby perpetrators
Hamish McDonald
10 May 2024
Under pressure from Canberra to fill the ships, how many “right-wing undesirables” did officials allow on boats to Australia?
Books & arts
Heritage hunting
Antonia Finnane
9 February 2024
A great number of migrants left China’s Zhongshan county for Australia — but the traffic wasn’t always one way
Essays & reportage
Red flags
Ebony Nilsson
8 February 2024
Communist or not, postwar refugees from the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe attracted the attention of Australia’s security services
Correspondents
“Never again”?
Klaus Neumann
6 February 2024
What’s behind the biggest protests in recent German history?
Essays & reportage
Modi’s expatriate army
Hamish McDonald
20 December 2023
Western leaders are distancing themselves from the Hindu nationalism popular in some sections of India’s diaspora
National affairs
Is migration heading “back to normal”?
Peter Mares
16 December 2023
The government has outlined its vision for skilled migration but it still has lots of colouring in to do
Essays & reportage
The Lebers, a family of ratbags
Seumas Spark
23 November 2023
Shaped by history, Sylvie Leber and her forebears have campaigned for social change
Books & arts
Stolen moments
Linda Jaivin
21 November 2023
Caught between their home villages and the city, a generation of Chinese migrant workers struggles for intimacy
Books & arts
Can I get a passport with that?
Max Holleran
25 October 2023
Cash-strapped microstates are selling citizenship that opens doors for the wealthy non-Western elite
Books & arts
Time’s quiet pulse
Penny Russell
29 September 2023
Historian Graeme Davison explores powerful forces below history’s horizon
Essays & reportage
A Dunera life
Seumas Spark
17 September 2023
Sent to Australia as an “enemy alien” by Churchill’s government, Bern Brent spent decades challenging conventional accounts of the internees’ lives
Essays & reportage
The visa that missed its mark
Peter Mares
2 August 2023
Designed for grandparents wanting to spend time with family in Australia, this new long-stay visa has proved surprisingly unpopular
International
Crimea’s Tatars and Russia’s war
Jon Richardson
9 June 2023
The fate of a displaced people lies at the heart of the war in Ukraine — and how it might be resolved
Books & arts
We in Germany
Klaus Neumann
8 May 2023
Who’s in and who’s out in the new Germany?
National affairs
Skill up or sink
Peter Mares
28 April 2023
Labor has taken bold steps towards recasting Australia’s migration system, but difficult questions remain
International
The Quad couple: India and Australia
Robin Jeffrey
31 March 2023
Let’s start with the good news about Australia–India relations
Books & arts
Life is beautiful. Life is sad
Sara Dowse
4 September 2022
Some exiles are enriched by their journey, others “killed and yet alive”
Books & arts
Becoming refugees
Klaus Neumann
18 December 2021
The perceived threat posed by Europe’s postwar “Displaced Persons” helped shape today’s international refugee regime
Essays & reportage
The Singapore grip
Tim Colebatch
17 December 2021
Singapore is good at solving economic problems, but its political stagnation is stopping it from dealing with urgent social challenges
Essays & reportage
Fake history
Klaus Neumann
8 December 2021
Has the significance of the
Tampa
affair been exaggerated?
Essays & reportage
Uptight and uncomfortable
Renée Jeffery
22 November 2021
How can we improve Australia’s uneasy engagement with the global human rights system?
Essays & reportage
In no-man’s land
Klaus Neumann
1 October 2021
The predicament of refugees at the Polish–Belarusian border evokes deportations to Poland in 1938 and a novel published in 1940
Essays & reportage
Unpicking the legacy of the Tampa
Madeline Gleeson
3 September 2021
Can we use a once-in-a-lifetime pandemic to help us rethink our treatment of refugees?
Essays & reportage
A line in the water
Peter Mares
28 August 2021
A fateful stand-off in August 2001 saw Australia’s treatment of boat arrivals shift from deterrence by example to deterrence by force
National affairs
Morrison’s message: nothing’s changed
Mike Steketee
23 August 2021
The prime minister is gripped by myths about asylum seekers that have hardened into articles of faith on both sides of parliament
National affairs
No way out?
Robert Milliken
12 August 2021
Twenty years — and many billions of dollars — later, Australia’s failed system of offshore detention lingers on
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