Between NASS and a Hard Place

Refugee Housing and Community Development in Yorkshire and Humberside - A Feasibility Study

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June 20, 2011 | History

Between NASS and a Hard Place

Refugee Housing and Community Development in Yorkshire and Humberside - A Feasibility Study

Between NASS and a hard place: Refugee housing and community development in Yorkshire and Humberside: A feasibility study

Author: Carter, Mary, El-Hassan, A. Azim

Author Organisation: Housing Associations' Charitable Trust (HACT)

Date: 2003

Summary
Aims

To explore the impact on refugee housing and community development of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999; to draw national lessons by examining the experience of one specific dispersal region, Yorkshire and Humberside; to make a constructive contribution towards integration which keeps the needs of asylum seekers and refugees at its heart and highlights good practice to lead future efforts.

Methodology

The report brings together the findings of a feasibility study commissioned by Housing Associations' Charitable Trust (hact). Field work involved face-to-face and telephone interviews with various agencies including refugee community groups, housing providers, statutory bodies, other relevant agencies; in-depth one-to-one semi structured interviews with 44 refugees and asylum seekers; field notes from participating community research workers; focus group discussions with 22 refugees and asylum seekers to validate the research findings. Training was provided for 12 community researchers recruited to help identify and carry out interviews.

Key Findings

The picture of settlement and integration within the context of dispersal is a confusion of responsibilities and overlapping policies and the needs of asylum seekers have yet to be fully integrated within local planning and delivery mechanisms for mainstream services. There is a fundamental lack of joining up of central government initiatives; dispersal coincided with many other programmes and was also affected by the building of a deterrent factor into the provision of support. Furthermore, the failure to ensure that asylum seekers and refugees are included in the broader neighbourhood renewal schemes and regeneration agendas means that asylum seekers are isolated from the mainstream at the time of receiving a positive decision. In addition the 28-day transition period to find and move into long term accommodation is too short. The areas in which asylum seekers are placed may also be places where they face racism and discrimination; they need to feel safe in both their temporary and permanent homes. The role of community development, in direct provision of services and support, as well as the identification, planning and delivery of local statutory, voluntary and community services, has also been belatedly recognised but lacks the resources needed to support the commitment and skills of community workers activists and volunteers.

Recommendations

Greater coordination and improve effectiveness for all the agencies involved, including the Home Office, NASS, the Office for the deputy Prime Minister, the Department of Work and Pensions, the Benefits Agency and local authority housing and benefit sections
An increase in [or at least adherence to] the 28-day transition period available to refugees to leave their NASS accommodation and find alternative support and housing
A range of measures to be taken on advice, information and training by all parties
Greater recognition of, and support for, the role and development of RCOs
Measures to improve the safety and inclusion of refugees
Settlement planning and policy that recognises the different stages of refugee housing need - including the vital involvement of refugees, asylum seekers and refugee community organisations at all levels of decision -making
Title Information:
ISBN 0 954373 0 0

Publish Date
Publisher
HACT
Language
English
Pages
50

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Book Details


Table of Contents

Foreword – Heather Petch, director, hact
Executive Summary
Hact’s role in refugee housing and integration
1 Introduction
2 The context
3 The methodology
4 Yorkshire and Humberside – the study region
5 Transition and settlement
6 Integration
7 Conclusions and recommendations
Appendix 1 – Interview statistics
Appendix 2 – The role of organisations
referred to in the report
Appendix 3 – Agencies interviewed for the research
Appendix 4 – The Asylum process and
definitions of terms
Bibliography

Edition Notes

Professional and scholarly.

Published in
London

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
363.59691094281

Contributors

Author
A Azim El-Hassan
Author
Mary Carter
Editor
Nikki van der Gaag
Photographer
Paula Solloway.
Contributor
Ahmed Gamal Eldin
Foreword
Heather Petch

The Physical Object

Format
Paperback
Pagination
50p.
Number of pages
50

Edition Identifiers

Open Library
OL16335516M
ISBN 10
0954537300
OCLC/WorldCat
53198421

Work Identifiers

Work ID
OL4716221W

Source records

Links outside Open Library

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June 20, 2011 Edited by 91.104.147.25 Edited without comment.
June 18, 2011 Edited by 91.104.156.166 Edited without comment.
June 16, 2011 Edited by 213.86.193.51 image, summary, tags, co-author
June 16, 2011 Edited by 213.86.193.51 Added new cover
December 10, 2009 Created by WorkBot add works page