Where does the buck stop? UK Home Office and other statutory body responses to allegations of human rights violations in two Serco-run hotels housing people seeking asylum

IF 1.1 4区 社会学 Q3 SOCIAL ISSUES
R. Moran, G. McMahon
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

RAPAR applies our participatory action research methods to amplify the living experience of families seeking asylum in the UK who are in ‘contingency accommodation’, aka ‘hotels’, and claiming human rights abuses on these sites. From all over the world, these people are without status in the UK and are therefore without recourse to the public funds that are, theoretically, available to everyone living in the UK with status. Their complete legal dependence on the Home Office and its subcontractors to ‘look after’ them and deal with any complaints leads to the question: why would anyone choose to challenge any organisation about human rights violations when that same organisation exercises such profound control over their day to day living reality? The data comprises contemporaneously collected evidence from individual correspondence, questionnaires, semi-structured conversations and case studies with hotel residents. Our preliminary analysis demonstrates considerable failures of statutory bodies in implementing their statutory duties. No evidence of meaningful investigation by any implicated statutory authority, or their privatised sub-contractors, into the human rights violation allegations asserted by hotel residents has been produced. The Local Authorities and the NHS insist that the Home Office is responsible for hotel residents within their boundaries. In turn, the Home Office, including Greater Manchester Police and sub-contractors Serco and Migrant Help, have failed to address the allegations in any transparent way. We call for immediate action that enables hotel residents to safely protect themselves and stimulates inclusive solution-making, with them, to end these human rights violations.
责任在哪里?英国内政部和其他法定机构对两家Serco经营的酒店侵犯人权指控的回应
RAPAR运用我们的参与式行动研究方法,扩大在英国寻求庇护的家庭的生活经验,这些家庭住在“应急住所”,又名“酒店”,并声称这些地点侵犯人权。来自世界各地的这些人在英国没有身份,因此无法求助于公共基金,而理论上,每个生活在英国的有身份的人都可以获得公共基金。他们在法律上完全依赖内政部及其分包商来“照顾”他们,并处理任何投诉,这导致了一个问题:当同一个组织对他们的日常生活现实实施如此深刻的控制时,为什么有人会选择挑战任何侵犯人权的组织?这些数据包括从个人通信、问卷调查、半结构化对话和与酒店居民的案例研究中同时收集的证据。我们的初步分析显示,法定机构在履行其法定职责方面相当失败。没有任何相关的法定当局或其私有化的分包商对酒店居民声称的侵犯人权指控进行有意义的调查的证据。地方当局和英国国民健康保险制度(NHS)坚持认为,内政部对其管辖范围内的酒店居民负责。反过来,包括大曼彻斯特警察局和分包商Serco和Migrant Help在内的内政部未能以任何透明的方式解决这些指控。我们呼吁立即采取行动,使酒店居民能够安全地保护自己,并鼓励与他们一起制定包容性的解决方案,以结束这些侵犯人权的行为。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
23.10%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: The Journal of Poverty and Social Justice provides a unique blend of high-quality research, policy and practice from leading authors in the field related to all aspects of poverty and social exclusion. The journal has changed its name to reflect its wider scope and has growing international coverage. Content spans a broad spectrum of poverty-related topics including social security, employment and unemployment, regeneration, housing, health, education and criminal justice, as well as issues of ethnicity, gender, disability and other inequalities as they relate to social justice.
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