Fear and (In)Security: The Canadian Government’s Response to the Chilean Refugees

Authors

  • Suha Diab Independent

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25071/1920-7336.40309

Keywords:

Canada, Chilean refugees, refugee policy, foreign policy, assemblage, civil activism, cultural racism

Abstract

This article examines Canada’s response to the Chilean refugee crisis in 1973. It explores the conditions that made the resettlement of Chilean refugees possible, despite the reluctance of the Canadian government to provide protection for them. The article focuses on the relation between the Canadian overnment’s regulatory discourses and practices on the one hand, and the Canadian public’s contestation of, and challenges to, such discourses and practices on the other. The Chilean refugee crisis revealed that the Canadian refugee protection regime was subject to political ideology, with very little consideration given to the suffering of refugees constructed as a threat to Canadian social, political, and economic well-being. However, civil society played a pivotal role in compelling the government to take a stance toward the refugees, though the government was able to control refugee reception by being deliberately selective about which lives it would save. The visibility and the success of the Canadian public in advocating on behalf of the Chilean refugees demonstrated the potential of this emerging civil power to affect refugee policies and practices while also revealing its limitations.

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Published

2015-12-02

How to Cite

Diab, S. (2015). Fear and (In)Security: The Canadian Government’s Response to the Chilean Refugees. Refuge: Canada’s Journal on Refugees, 31(2), 51–62. https://doi.org/10.25071/1920-7336.40309

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