1. Controlling Compassion: Organizational and Psychological Constraints on the Administration of Asylum.
- Author
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Lightbourn, Tiffany
- Subjects
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PSYCHIATRIC hospitals , *LEGAL status of refugees , *IMMIGRATION policy ,UNITED States emigration & immigration - Abstract
While aiming to preserve domestic security, the Department of Homeland Security is also influenced by the humanitarian concern of making immigration interviews a social space where aliens have a fair chance of demonstrating their fear of persecution. Immigration policy has been schizophrenic in its aims, vacillating between opening and closing the door to new arrivals. The restrictionist sentiment that provided the basis of America's earliest immigration laws provided a template for the creation and administration of refugee policies and asylum law. This paper examines the role of ideological biases in judgments about the credibility of applicants for asylum. This study focuses on how officers think about cases and the situational and cultural influences on the decisions asylum adjudicators render. For persons attempting to enter this country for asylum, certain social group memberships such as nationality, make it more or less likely that their case will be referred to an asylum officer. For those that do get as far as an asylum interview, a host of social psychological phenomena ranging from perceptual biases to attribution processes shape how these individuals who come in contact with the asylum system are viewed and ultimately treated. Several areas are given particular consideration in this analysis of asylum decision-making: (a) schemas and the processing of claimant information, (b) culture and attributions made regarding claimant behavior, and (c) external constraints officers face in processing cases. This paper is based on a variety of qualitative methods including, ethnographic observations of asylum hearings and interviews, and in-depth interviews with claimants and asylum attorneys. It is hoped that this paper illuminates the extrajudicial factors that affect asylum claimant's ability to establish a credible fear of persecution, and some of the difficulties refugees face in gaining legal entry to America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004