30年过去了:一个美丽的新世界还是一场正在展开的灾难?

Stuart Turner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在这篇短文中,重点是被迫移民的社会和政治方面。有人认为,旨在限制进入发达国家的政策,就像美国的“禁令”一样,为走私者(在这种情况下是人口)创造了一个繁荣的犯罪市场。增加旅行的难度既增加了他们的利润,也增加了他们的手段的复杂性。向冲突地区邻国的难民提供有针对性的、适当控制的支助可能有助于减少前往欧洲的压力,而且可能更成功,也更人道主义。对于那些到达发达国家的人来说,还有改进法律决策过程的余地。心理输入应包括对法律假设的科学调查,并提供有关的专家文献评论,例如关于现代记忆知识的评论。信任是镇压性暴力的第一个受害者,而反对派团体之间的不信任可能是其成功的关键机制之一。我们需要确保我们不会为这种反应提供进一步的理由。虽然前面没有勇敢或新的世界,但我们必须继续面对无知和偏见,同时努力避免更多的人道主义灾难。三十多年前,我们发表了一个潜在的框架,用于理解有组织的国家暴力的幸存者如何对复杂和严重的创伤做出反应(Turner和Gorst-Unsworth, 1990)。我们认为,没有单一的心理过程支撑对这种经历的反应,因此,不可能有单一的酷刑综合征,而是一系列可理解的心理途径,不同的经历在不同程度上激活,导致情绪反应的多样性,这对康复和治疗有影响。我们还询问了家庭医生关于难民的健康需求(拉姆齐和特纳,1993年),从那时起,特别是近年来,关于治疗方案的证据是如何发展的,这是令人惊奇的。在本文中,为了庆祝《酷刑》杂志的周年纪念,我将回顾过去三十年,重点关注强迫移民的政治、法律和法医方面。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
30 years on: A brave new world or an unfolding disaster?

In this short essay, the focus is on social and political aspects of forced migration. It is argued that policies designed to restrict access to developed countries have, rather like the American "prohibition", produced a thriving criminal market for smugglers, in this case of people. Making travel more difficult increases both their profits and the sophistication of their methods. Provision of targeted, properly controlled, support for refugees in countries neighbouring conflict zones might help to reduce the pressure on travel to Europe and could be both more successful and more hu-manitarian. For those who do reach devel-oped countries, there is scope to improve the legal decision-making process. Psychological input should include scientific investigation of legal assumptions, and the provision of rel-evant expert literature reviews, for example concerning modern knowledge of memory. Trust is the first casualty of repressive vio-lence, and mistrust among opposition groups is probably one of the key mechanisms of its success. We need to make sure that we do not provide further grounds for this sort of reaction. Although there is no brave or new world ahead, we must continue to confront ignorance and prejudice, as we seek to avoid more humanitarian disasters.It is now just over thirty years since we published a potential framework for under-standing how survivors of organised state vi-olence react to complex and severe trauma (Turner and Gorst-Unsworth, 1990). We argued that no single psychological process underpins the reactions to this experience, and therefore, there can be no unitary torture syndrome, but rather a series of understandable psychological pathways activated to varying degrees by dif-ferent experiences, leading to diversity of emo-tional response, with implications for recovery and treatment. We also asked family doctors about health needs of refugees (Ramsay and Turner, 1993), and it is wonderful to see how the evidence on treatment options has devel-oped since then, especially in recent years. In this paper, looking back over the last thirty years, in celebration of the anniversary of Torture journal, I will focus on political, legal and forensic aspects of forced migration.

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