Journal of Refugee Studies
Volume 28, Issue 4, 2015, Pages 544-569
Rights, compassion and invisible children: A critical discourse analysis of the parliamentary debates on the mandatory detention of migrant children in Canada (Article)
Kronick R.* ,
Rousseau C.
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a
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
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b
Division of Social and Cultural Psychiatry, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada
Abstract
From 2011 until 2012, members of the Canadian parliament debated three iterations of legislation relating to the detention of asylum seekers. The final bill, unlike its predecessors, exempted children under the age of 16 from mandatory year-long detention, opening the door to children's prolonged separation from parents or invisible detention as guests alongside mandatorily detained parents. Using a critical discourse analysis approach, we examine parliamentary debates and seek to determine how speech acts within the Canadian parliament construct a (detained) migrant child. Our results suggest that parliamentarians invoke logics of human rights and humanitarianism and that a reconfiguration of these paradigms places the state rather than the refugee in need of protection, thus introducing a hierarchy of compassion. Within this discourse, children are rendered so vulnerable as to be voiceless, enforcing the corollary image of the threatening adult refugee, which ultimately allows detention of children to be framed as a protective measure. We hypothesize mechanisms that make such constructions possible and discuss the implications for advocacy efforts. © The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84963854389&doi=10.1093%2fjrs%2ffev005&partnerID=40&md5=e0d9d8d3b584353b6fb4597de0fb2892
DOI: 10.1093/jrs/fev005
ISSN: 09516328
Cited by: 10
Original Language: English