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ASYLUM SEEKER ACCESS TO EMPLOYMENT AND SOCIAL ASSISTANCE Prof. Audrey Macklin, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, November 2012.

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Presentation on theme: "ASYLUM SEEKER ACCESS TO EMPLOYMENT AND SOCIAL ASSISTANCE Prof. Audrey Macklin, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, November 2012."— Presentation transcript:

1 ASYLUM SEEKER ACCESS TO EMPLOYMENT AND SOCIAL ASSISTANCE Prof. Audrey Macklin, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, November 2012

2 The Asylum Paradox Prof. Audrey Macklin, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, November 2012 Every asylum seeker who arrives at the border, whether or not a refugee, represents BOTH  The fulfilment of the receiving state’s int’l obligation AND  The failure of border control Paradox is managed by suppressing indeterminacy of asylum seeker’s identify: purporting to ‘know’ (prior to or independent of RSD) that the asylum seeker is bogus/dangerous/infiltrator/economic migrant eases moral distaste for punitive measures

3 Policy Drivers Prof. Audrey Macklin, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, November 2012  Deterrence  Segregation of asylum seekers (physical/social/moral)  Avoidance of fiscal burden to state  Benefits to employers of access to illegalized labour  Legal constraints (usually via judicial application of domestic, regional, international human rights) Legal constraints formally preclude blanket denial of employment access as well subsistence: when do states cross that line?

4 Regional/ Int’l Legal Constraints Prof. Audrey Macklin, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, November 2012  Refugee Convention  Employment, housing, public education, social security etc. on same basis as ‘most favoured nation’ or nations guaranteed to refugees, but [arguably] not asylum seekers  ICESCR – social and economic rights (including employment and social assistance) without discrimination, but subject to progressive realization  EU Reception Directive (Recast 2008, amended 2011)  Employment after 6 months, subsistence support  No const’l protection (Australia); not litigated in US, Cda

5 Policy Instruments Prof. Audrey Macklin, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, November 2012  Work Permits  Conditioned by: passage of time, occupational sector, location, duration  Social Assistance (from equivalence to percentage of subsistence for citizens/non-asylum seekers)  Cash, voucher, in-kind, mixture  Conditioned by dispersal, pre-requisites, reporting requirements, subject to revocation for breach  Reception Centres, Detention

6 Examples Prof. Audrey Macklin, Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, November 2012  UK  Judicial decisions: Adam (2005)  Australia  Employment under bridging visas, very limited subsistence  US  6 month eligibility for work permit  Varying state level benefits  Canada  Work permit for most asylum seekers, access to social assistance


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