Mandatory Detention

Mandatory detention is the practise of detaining all unauthorised arrivals, asylum seekers, or illegal immigrants while their claim is processed, or with the intention of deporting them. Mandatory detention is practised in various forms in different countries. The specifics of the implementation differ from country to country.

Mandatory detention in Australia

Mandatory detention laws were introduced in Australia with bi-partisan support in 1992. This legislation was progressively strengthened throughout the 1990s reaching a pinnacle in 2001 during the Tampa affair. See full article at Mandatory detention in Australia

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
tabatha jordan
eugene hasenfus
turkmen people
the envoy
hampton beach, new hampshire
uta trax
richard wayne chambliss, jr.
leopold v of austria (babenberg)
marie louise of bourbon parma
khachkar
australian megafauna
fernando vallejo
faux cyrillic
transverse city
seabrook nuclear power station
lake hauroko
internal pudendal artery
johnny ridden
bill manhire
hooded wheatear
battle of loum
john wilks
southland plains
learning to flinch
chakravarti
propylhexedrine
tortoise matsumoto
zn'rx
awarua plain
kapap
list of open problems in computer science
finsch's wheatear
venezuelan coup attempt of 2002
orangery
akash chopra
enga
mandatory detention in australia
nitpicking (sport)
first taiwan strait crisis
the wind (album)
atorox prize
te waewae bay
strata title
checkwriter