Back to All Events

Refugee Youth Agency in Flux: Active and Passive Waiting in Transit Country Indonesia

Organizer: The Center for Southeast Asian Studies, University of Michigan

Description:

For more than two decades, Indonesia has been a transit spot for asylum seekers from Central Asia, South Asia, East Africa, and Southeast Asia while irregularly en route to Australia. Following Australia’s controversial ‘stop the boats’ policy, thousands of refugees, including the young population, must wait longer in Indonesia to get their refugee status processed by UNHCR and to have a chance to resettle in a third country. As a non-signatory state to the 1951 Refugee Convention, Indonesia has a limited legal framework to protect the rights of refugees and asylum seekers, which causes grave precarious conditions for them. Nevertheless, arbitrariness in Indonesia’s legal framework and its flexibility in handling refugees surprisingly has provided a certain level of “informal protection” and opportunities for young refugees to make maneuvers in the fluid arenas. As they wait, the young people also plan, anticipate, negotiate, hustle, play, and rest. This talk will focus on the dynamics of refugee youths’ agency-in-waiting. Professor Masardi explores how young refugees exercise passive and active waiting and what contributing factors catalyze or impede the distribution of their agency.

Click here to register.

Previous
Previous
February 2

Sex and Gender in the Ethnographic Encounter in the Highlands of the American Colonial Philippines

Next
Next
February 6

Land as Experiment, Landscapes as Laboratories: Destruction and Repair in Indonesia’s Peatlands