27 Jul 2015

The Refugee Question That Richard Marles Couldn’t Answer

By Max Chalmers

Beyond the question of boat turn backs, both major parties have failed to acknowledge a massive hole in Australia’s current response to refugees, writes Max Chalmers.

It was a big weekend for the shadow minister for immigration.

As the ALP’s national conference finally arrived it must have provoked a few nerves for the man staking his career on a policy of turning refugees back to sea – ‘where it is safe to do so’.

In the lead up to the conference Richard Marles had been checking in with refugee groups, making the case for turn backs, and gathering feedback on other proposals, some of which were added to the party’s platform on Saturday. Labor has committed to upping Australia’s refugee intake over a 10-year period and agreed to appoint an advocate for children in detention, though their plans remain fuzzy, and refugee advocates have been cautious in their support.

When the crucial vote on turn backs came to the floor it went about as well as Marles could have hoped. The proposed amendment to the party’s platform – to make it explicitly anti turn back – went down, and party leaders got to congratulate each other on how civil the debate had been.

The day before, the shadow minister had addressed a packed room at one of the conference’s ‘fringe events’, where public policy and Labor aligned groups hosted forums across the weekend.

The session was tense, but Marles was prepared for most of the questions that came his way. The deaths at sea argument was deployed often, a talking point that has proved a gift for Labor right members trying to justify punitive policies to their own party.

Yet there was one question that finally caused Marles to come unstuck, forcing him to deviate from the pre-prepared lines he would eventually deliver to the party as a whole the next day, when the actual turn back debate took place.

What will happen to the 2,000 or so people already sent to Manus Island and Nauru? How much more will they have to endure in the name of stopping the boats, or deaths at sea, or political expedience?

The fate of these people was put to Marles by the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre’s Pamela Curr, who told the room that women are facing escalating threats in the community on Nauru. Curr opened by saying she did not wish to demonise Nauruans, but demanded to know what an ALP government would do to help refugees living on the island.

A screen grab of Sky News coverage of the ALP national conference, showing Richard Marles arguing for boat turn backs.

Suddenly we were no longer talking about hypothetical boats that could arrive under a potential future policy – these are real people facing enormous and ongoing difficulties right now, as a direct result of mandatory offshore processing and placement.

They are overwhelmingly being found to be refugees in need of protection, although their treatment would remain unjustifiable even if they were not. There is no sign those released from detention have any real prospects of long-term resettlement where they are now – in Nauru, or PNG, or Cambodia – and their futures remain entirely uncertain.

It was the first time Marles had to almost completely skirt a question. Despite having worked hard to convince the country he is genuinely worried about the health and safety of people seeking asylum, the shadow minister was at a loss to explain what he would be doing to improve the situation of those who have survived the journey by sea, only to be sent back across it to be held in limbo.

Marles eventually argued Labor would be more successful than the Coalition at negotiating with Pacific neighbours to resettle the refugees, but it wasn’t clear why. He said he did not think those stranded on either of the islands could be brought back to Australia.

With Australia’s discourse on asylum seekers obsessively focused on boats, it has been easy for the Coalition to get away with claiming policy victory despite the fact their approach has left 2,000 people trapped in places that have, at times, proved extremely dangerous.

You get the impression the government’s desire not to talk about these people has little to do with humanitarian concerns – talking up brutality has been an asset for them when it comes to refugee policy – and more to do with the fact they actually have no idea what to do about these men, women, and children.

For now, it seems, neither does Richard Marles or Labor.

In the meantime the horror stories and tales of everyday defeat coming off of the two islands only make life easier for Labor, the Coalition, and those who have decided deterrence is the right approach to refugees.

The point of these camps was always to make an example of the people sent there. Marles must be of the mind that not enough of an example has yet been made.

New Matilda contacted Marles’ office this morning to give the shadow minister the chance to outline what, if anything, his government would do to assist refugees living on Manus Island and Nauru. While responding to a separate inquiry, the office was yet to reply to questions about Nauru and Manus at the time of writing.

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This user is a New Matilda supporter. MattQ
Posted Monday, July 27, 2015 - 17:31

Craven feigned concern is sickening.

Let's get really serious then. If the international community is to condemn us, we may as well be hanged for a sheep as a lamb. Create and charge them with the crime levelled against them: 'Illegal' entry, and put them in jail for life.

Too expensive? No problem. Reintroduce the death penalty and apply it retrospectively to 'illegal' entry. That would allow the closure of most detentions centres, saving even more money, but more importantly, ending the suffering of their inmates. Summary executions at sea could then be carried out at a distance by 'customs'. Since they are overwhelmingly genuinely fleeing for their lives, their home nations may even pay a bounty. Hell, the not-so-cashed-up asylum-seekers will be glad they couldn't afford the ticket!!!

Everyone wins. Refugees aren't suffering for nearly as long, and we got someone else to pay for it.

Not prepared to do this? Why?

MJoanneS
Posted Monday, July 27, 2015 - 17:47

The fact is the only election the ALP have convincingly won in the last 20 years was 2007 when Rudd actually did lead on humanitarian grounds instead of racist scapegoating and demonising.

 

Marles is an ignorant hick coward and even some of his staff are embarrassed by his laziness.  We need to ask why we keep paying these ministers for the only visas they have to personally approve are refugee visas, the rest are delegated.

 

Which means for the past 5 years the immigration minister from the ALP and now LNP have not done any work at all beside dream up new punishments for the same 2,000 innocent people.

 

A murder, rape and hand cut off on Manus Island on Saturday still won't make them take responsibility for their crimes against humanity.

 

Burke pretended to care about a baby coffin but the ALP were in charge when the refugees were left to drown while authorities ignored 37 may day calls over 2 days so he killed the baby and then pretended to care as justification for killing even more babies.

DrGideonPolya
Posted Monday, July 27, 2015 - 18:18

I once attended a splendid talk by economics  journalist Ken Davidson who said that successful  politicians are very good at knowing what the voter secretly  wants. Labor politicians  are no exception.

The Labor Conference  consensus is that the Australian voters overwhelmingly want economic security  and the egregiously racist self-aggrandisement and sense of security from  participation in safe and cheap turkey-shoot, Muslim-killing  wars   for the US, coupled with civil rights constraints at home and gross human rights abuse of Muslim refugees, including child refugees.

A small  minority of decent, educated, humane  Australians think otherwise but are drowned out by the Murdoch media and their fellow travellers.  

Indeed about 80% of Australians  vote for the warmongering, war criminal, climate criminal, civil rights-violating, human rights-abusing, and child-abusing Lib-Labs (Coalition and Labor right) ; 70% of newspaper readers read Murdoch  rags like the Herald Scum; 46% of Australians are functionally illiterate and 53% are functionally innumerate; 25% of adult Australian have been sexually abused as children  in a society  that looks the other way; Australia has invaded 85  countries (as compared to the British 193, the French 80 , the US 70 and  Apartheid Israel 12) with 30 of these invasions associated with genocidal atrocities; and there is an ongoing Aboriginal Genocide and Aboriginal Ethnocide (see Gideon Polya, “As UK Lackeys Or US Lackeys Australians Have Invaded 85 Countries (British 193, French 80, US 70)”, Countercurrents, 09 February, 2015: http://www.countercurrents.org/polya090215.htm )  i.e . Australia urgently needs de-Nazification but is getting more of the same from the war criminal, climate criminal, human rights-abusing,  child–abusing, neo-liberal, corporatist, neo-fascist Lib-Labs (Coalition and Labor Right).

Labor used to be a nationalist and socialist party but is becoming a national socialist party.  Decent Australians  will utterly reject the endlessly warmongering , human rights-abusing and child-abusing  Lib-Labs (Coalition and Labor Right), vote 1 Green and put the Coalition last (there are a few decent Labor MPs).

This user is a New Matilda supporter. RossC
Posted Monday, July 27, 2015 - 20:18

unsolicited refugee arrivals by boat is a diabolical problem all around. If unsolicited arrivals can't be controlled, what is the point of Australia even having a planned refugee intake?

So, ugly and difficult and confronting as it is, its important to have this policy sorted out now.

Firstly, these people should be treated with humanity and respect and within the law wherever possible. This is where I agree with The Greens.

But at the same time, welcoming unsolicited refugees with even semi-open arms, and issuing residential visas for all who qualify as refugees, will certainly encourage others - many others - to contemplate risking the journey. From 2007-2013 we only started to see the tip of this potentially enormous and tragic iceberg. This is where I disagree with The Greens.

Worldwide, the number of people in legitimate peril, with the means to travel, and who would consider an unsolicited journey to Australia via SE Asia and then a boat or by any other means, if they thought they had a real chance of resettlement here, is in the hundreds of thousands+ (assuming just a tiny fraction of the worlds current refugees seek/can finance this option: http://www.unhcr.org/53a155bc6.html).

How many unsolicited legitimate refugee arrivals into Australia (and deaths at sea during the attempts) are The Greens happy with? 

Tens of thousands? Hundreds of thousands? Millions?

Even assuming millions, Australia would eventually have to turn off the unsolicited-arrival-by-boat tap by any means anyway - because otherwise, arrivals - and drownings - would continue unabated until eventually an overstressed Australian infrastructure began to resemble the very disfunction these people were fleeing - only then would the appeal wane.

Who presently living in Australia would want this? What would be achieved? Would The Greens ever change their policy? If they did, what would it be to?

So, unpalateable as it is, I see little option but for the opposition to adopt some aspects of the LNP policy that has been demonstrated to work. It should be possible to develop this policy in collaboration with our neighbours, because it is also in their interests - eg. many refugees currently in Indonesia are only there because they thought Indo was a stepping stone to a better option - Aust (or NZ).

If Australia/NZ is off the table, Indonesia as an incidental destination likely will be too.

What to do with existing refugees is another problem. Prompt resettlement - presumably by negotiation with neighbouring countries - is the only humane thing to do, and I hope Labor can sort this out promptly once they are in government. It certainly doesnt seem as if the LNP are going to do the decent thing here.

what else should labor do? Boost planned refugee intakes, reinstate foreign aid programs, reinstate abc australia broadcast services, basically all the things that help make australia a good global citizen...that the current government has stopped the boats AND slashed these other services is totally disgraceful.

MJoanneS
Posted Monday, July 27, 2015 - 21:09

They are not uninvited, but if they were would you have any visitors who came without invite to your house locked up in the shed so that others would knock on the door?

This user is a New Matilda supporter. RossC
Posted Monday, July 27, 2015 - 22:38

Visitors, uninvited or otherwise, are fine mjs. Visitors.

I posed some questions of my own. Interesting that you didn't address any of those. .....

This user is a New Matilda supporter. MattQ
Posted Monday, July 27, 2015 - 22:40

I'm not buying it RossC. The universe didn't pop into existence in 2007. That's just the year both sides of politics coalesced on the issue in a sick game of one-upmanship. Coincidence? Think again.

The numbers show the same thing they always did. Australia was always a very unpopular destination choice even when we honoured our international legal commitments. Being bastards has cut at most 30% from coming by boat, and probably killed more people through refoulement than the number in that 30% saved from drowning.

All this has cost the taxpayer thousands of fortunes. To buy one thing. Them.

This user is a New Matilda supporter. Rychard
Posted Monday, July 27, 2015 - 23:15

If Greece with all their financial woes, can welcome asylum seekers in the thousands, then damn sure we can do the same. Only problem is this appalling racism and xenophobia that has been encouraged to take deep root and spread into the Australian population by Abbott and cronies, poisoning all it infests. 

We are an incredibly wealthy country, paying something like $400,000 per person and counting, to lock them up in a tropical hell hole where they can be abused and mistreated with apparent impunity.  To resettle them would cost nothing like that. Doubtless, many could contribute significantly to their new home. Not only is it the right thing to do, it is the most sensible, economically and socially.

 

MJoanneS
Posted Monday, July 27, 2015 - 22:56

Because Ross your questions are irrelevant nonsense.

This user is a New Matilda supporter. RossC
Posted Tuesday, July 28, 2015 - 00:00

2009 was the year the numbers spiked by 10x matt. And then went up further after that.

http://www.refugeecouncil.org.au/fact-sheets/asylum-seeker-issues/boat-arrivals/

Maybe the numbers would have come down again all by themselves. But the numbers stopped in transit and now in-limbo in indonesia suggest otherwise and hint at what might have happened next.

even including these, Australias numbers are tiny by comparison with other countries, but those are totally unsustainable -disastrous in some cases ( http://time.com/3967531/lesbos-greece-refugees/). Hardly the basis for a sensible comparison. Our seaways are also much more hazardous than the Mediterranean. So more casualties here as a percentage. I reiterate - do we have a pre-emptive discussion on this with small numbers, or 'open borders' followed by a reactive discussion with big numbers?

and mjs - is that truly the best you can muster? A mis-analogy and dismissal? Lame.

Dx2013
Posted Monday, July 27, 2015 - 23:46

What to do with these 2,000 or so asylum seekers on Manus an Nauru?

those (about 50%) who were found to be refugees should seek UNHCR help to be resettled in other countries if they don't like to be settled in PNG, Nauru or Cambodia. Because resettling them in Australia would only open up people smuggling trade again

others who were founded not to be refugees should be sent back to their  countries. If they want to sit out on Manus and Nauru to try their luck, they should stop complaining because no one owes them anything.

This user is a New Matilda supporter. MattQ
Posted Tuesday, July 28, 2015 - 00:37

Ok thanks Ross. Excellent. A source and some numbers. Let's see what we have here and what possible scenarios we can use to explain them. I suggest Occams Razor to arbitrate between them if you concur.

Under the heading: Are we being swamped by boat arrivals? we have some numbers:

Country 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 | Total
--------------------------------------------------------------------+--------

Australia 60 148 161 2,726 6,555 4,565 | 14,215
Greece 9,050 19,900 15,300 10,165 1,765 1,030 | 57,210
Italy 22,000 19,900 36,000 8,700 4,348 61,000 | 152,821
Malta 1,800 1,800 2,700 1,470 28 1,574 | 9,372
Spain 32,000 18,000 13,400 7,285 3,632 5,443 | 79,760
Yemen 29,000 29,500 50,000 77,310 53,382 103,000 | 342,192

[Edit: Table looks great in Preview :(  'Formatted' font missing? ]

The first thing I'd say is this is a very haphazard and overwhelmingly insufficient collection of numbers to show much other than a very hazy picture of increasing numbers of displaced from Middle-Eastern conflicts, less from Africa(since rising exponentially), and anyone could have told us that. The second is that they are, in terms of our capacity to process and absorb them, insignificant. Since those numbers, we've had over 40,000 new boat-arrivals, and they still represent neither a currrent, or future threat, because their numbers fit the historical curve, in proportion to the numbers of newly displaced refugees with some sort connection with Australia. I would like to see your evidence that the millions of refugees held in Malaysia and Indonesia are being somehow prevented from attempting the dangerous boat-ride to Australia. Most of these people just want to go home. We should be nice to them and push for peace in their regions instead of stirring up conflict, over and over. It ain't rocket science.

That's it, that's all it ever was. They are displaced, and have a link to Australia. Documents from the UN, APH and Australian Archives just do not support the 'exponential-rise' hypothesis. Since no-one else seems to have done it, I'm (slowly) working on some graphs after being inspired by a recent Michael Brull piece.

What do you think these numbers show?

EarnestLee
Posted Tuesday, July 28, 2015 - 01:07

Get the Indonesians to impose the Death Penalaty for People smugglers.

Scrap Operation Sovereign Boreders as the most expensive peacetime operation for the Australian Navy.

Let the boats back but arrest the crews and sent send them to Indonesia for Trial, Sentencing and punishment.

Bet the boats will stop within weeks

MJoanneS
Posted Tuesday, July 28, 2015 - 03:30

There are no people smugglers doing anything.  HOnestly how do people get to be so lazy and brainwashed.

This user is a New Matilda supporter. RossC
Posted Tuesday, July 28, 2015 - 08:58

Mattq, im all for raising humanitarian immigration levels to this country - and, as a rich nation, a big boost to aid programs abroad. Thus it is my preference to go the planned route, rather than the unplanned route with its seemingly unavoidable numerous tragic drownings. Obviously the numbers involved to date are tiny, but were growing, : ~150 - 3000 - 14000.....thats almost exponential. But I suspect delivery capacities would have levelled that growth off eventually.

Thats not the issue. Demonstrating a capacity to plan and control is the issue. Any sort of proxy 'open borders' policy is political suicide in australia, and I dont see that changing. Thats the reality. So some of this has to be pragmatic.

O. Puhleez
Posted Tuesday, July 28, 2015 - 11:30

EL:

Get the Indonesians to impose the Death Penalaty [sic] for People smugglers.

'People smuggler' is a bullshit term invented purely fo political convenience. These people have only ever operated a perfectly legal ferry service: no more. Completely within Indonesian and Australian law.

What precisely is the 'crime' for which you would have these people cop a death penalty? Offering to transport people who have no means of their own over international waters to Australian territory where they can legally claim asylum?

Their boats may not conform to everyone's idea of seaworthy craft, but they are good enough under Indonesian law for fishing in local and international waters.

Now maybe in Indonesian law  there is some sub-clause somewhere that says only a registered and properly certificated water taxi or ferry can carry paying passengers, but I doubt it. (By 'properly certificated' in the Indonesian context one means that all inspectors, police and other officials have been satisfactorily bribed.)

Of all nations, Indonesia probably has the most internal maritime activity; more even than Greece.

This user is a New Matilda supporter. MattQ
Posted Tuesday, July 28, 2015 - 16:40

Ross it's not exponential, it's proportional to the number of displaced. Afghanistan: ? millions Iraq: 2 million refugees. Syria: 5 million, Jordan: a million, all since 2009. Yemen is now in civil war thanks to our oligarchal, tyrannical allies the House of Saud.

You are allowed to get scared only when the number of newly displaced refugees in the world drops, but the boats don't. So far in History, that has not happened. After the Vietnam war, the boats stopped early because Malcolm Fraser reached out and saved them from drowning by bringing them here. Most returned anyway once peace returned to their homeland.

Ah shucks, why can't people read numbers properly. What do you see here that is different from the historical record??? What??? Do you know better than history? Do your special mental processes render every relevant statistic invalid??? I propose no. You have been deceived.

This user is a New Matilda supporter. RossC
Posted Tuesday, July 28, 2015 - 17:12

MattQ..numbers that rise successively in order of magnitude increments - 1, 10, 100, 1000, 10000, etc, is the very definition of an exponential notation

(https://www.lhup.edu/~dsimanek/scenario/errorman/exponent.htm).

That was the broad growth pattern for recent boat arrivals here - although obviously still in the early stages for Australia, and now nipped in the bud.

Refugee arrivals at any destination are not just directly proportional to the number displaced as you opine above, they are also proportional to the establishment of an effective delivery mechanism and growth of its capacity - eg. small boats in the Australian example.  Initially, there won't be many, because a system has not been well established/tested, and so is very uncertain. Once a system has been proven to work reasonably effectively, it scales up geometrically as more onlookers progressively seek to join in. Thats how exponential growth works.

Sure, push factors and fluctuations of the displaced are in the mix too, but lots of people have been sitting in refugee camps for lots of years - we can hardly blame them from taking their own initiative to have a crack at getting to a first-world country like Australia once an effective pathway becomes clear.

You only have to review the statistics of some other countries (from the link I provided earlier that you reproduce above) to see how quickly a trickle can scale up. Lots of refugees now trapped in 'transit' countries like Indo and Malaysia give an idea of the potential numbers if left unchecked. Why do you think these countries are referred to as 'transit' countries?

I don't begrudge anyone from trying to get to safety - that's what I'd do in the same situation. But there must be a better way to proactively intervene than mopping up the remnants of yet another small-boat sinking tragedy off our shores.

If they don't set sail, they can't sink. But getting to that point is confronting. 

O. Puhleez
Posted Tuesday, July 28, 2015 - 23:52

The bedrock of this refugee question is simple in my view, especially in the afterglow of Go Back to Where you Came From on SBS TV.

All people on Earth have a right to be treated equally. Not so all cultures. Some cultures are definitely superior to others. And culture determines the style of the politics.

The culture of a country refugees are fleeing from will always be inferior to that of any country they are fleeing to.

IanD
Posted Wednesday, July 29, 2015 - 05:48

Perhaps he is correct, he may be able to convince other Pacific countries to resettle Manus/Nauru refugees.

Perhaps our Kiwi neighbours could be persauded. Their refugee intake totals only 750 per annum. Of those, ONLY 107 come from the Middle East and 108 from Africa. The rest come from the Americas, South Pacific & Asia. SBS should do a story on the Kiwis policy. 

http://www.immigration.govt.nz/NR/rdonlyres/BFA5A365-51D3-44C7-BAEE-112683F82C18/0/refugeequotaprogramme201314to201516.pdf

New Zealand I guess though has earnt the right to have such a low numbers, seeing they rarely poke their noses into other country's business. 

Our government should do the same. Ignore the rest of the world's conflicts, then we don't need to help clean up the mess. If weveryone did that the middle east would be a region of peace, presumably?

That said, the jews would have to leave..........funny that the only country in the middle east where religious freedom is permisable would have to cease to exist for there to be peace in a whole region. SSM would be set back a bit too. Gays would always need to pack a parachute lest they get tossed off a tall building.

MJoanneS
Posted Wednesday, July 29, 2015 - 17:25

REligious freedom allowed in Israel, that is pure parody.

MJoanneS
Posted Wednesday, July 29, 2015 - 18:18

Not really OP, the Persian culture is far superior to the culture of the British colonial settlements which were built on genocides.

O. Puhleez
Posted Thursday, July 30, 2015 - 23:04

MJS:

Are you trying to tell us that the totality of modern Iran, with its public executions every Friday after prayers, mainly of women found guilty of 'adultery' (but not their male partners) and the total dominance of all cultural life by the Islamic clerics, is somehow superior to modern Australia, where people can express themselves however they like? What they come up with might not your cup of tea, but there's no accounting for taste.

The mullahs frown on music, figurative art, imported films and so on. I wouldn't be surprised if they censor childrens' skipping rhymes.

The clerics set themselves up as wardens of the minds of the people: with greater or lesser success, depending on circumstances. The greatness of Islamic civilisation was achieved not because of Islam and its clerics, but despite it and them. Read Ibn Warraq.

Let me put it another way: people always flee a culturally inferior society, and seek refuge in a superior one. Full bloody stop. The Islamic world is the major generator of refugees (cue whataboutery) and is going through the same sort of upheaval that western Christendom went through 500 years ago, which we now call The Reformation. I sincerely hope that it leads to an Islamic version of western modernity.

This user is a New Matilda supporter. MattQ
Posted Friday, July 31, 2015 - 18:28

RossC Lol I'll allow you some frustrated condescension. A sequence of 3 numbers is not a series, as you allege. Ask a mathematician.

1 million. The number is meaningless by itself. So is 150, or 20. Numbers are used in analysis to show relationships. By itself, each number tells us very little of what we NEED to know to manage refugees adequately. I don't give a fig what the numbers ARE, I need to know what they MEAN. The data seems not to have been compiled to do this, and I'm working on it.

Here's what you need to do to convince me:

 If you can show me that the proportion of refugees heading to Australia has departed from it's historical relationship with the global population of new refugees who have existing links to our country, and that proportion of refugees is on an exponential trajectory upward and not just from 3 lousy data points on only one relevant number(devoid of meaning-creating relationships), I will be convinced.

What will it take to convince you that the worlds disposessed are not descending upon us? That we can easily handle ALL who wish to come here, usually with extremely marketable skills, often in short supply here.

'Gut'-feeling is an insult to ourselves and those on the boats. We have to do better. We're cutting off our nose to spite our face and soon I'll have all the data to show the truth of this, or be forced to admit I was wrong. Whatever, I seek data to justify or disprove the opinions built from the numbers seen scattered across the internet. Belief should be compelling, not convenient or worse, lazy.

O. Puhleez
Posted Saturday, August 1, 2015 - 01:01

MQ:

If you can show me that the proportion of refugees heading to Australia has departed from it's historical relationship with the global population of new refugees who have existing links to our country, and that proportion of refugees is on an exponential trajectory upward and not just from 3 lousy data points on only one relevant number(devoid of meaning-creating relationships), I will be convinced.

That is,".. convinced that the worlds disposessed are ... descending upon us."

What you are challenging the rest of us to predict and model mathematically to your satisfaction is the flow characteristics of a (possible) human avalanche, such as is presently being experienced on the Greek island of Kos, the entry point of choice for North African refugees seeking settlement in Europe. Well, here is the abstract of one paper on the (on the face of it) considerably simpler case of snow avalanches:

Abstract—Avalanche release of snow has been modeled in the

present studies. Snow is assumed to be represented by semi-solid

and the governing equations have been studied from the concept

of continuum approach. The dynamical equations have been solved

for two different zones [starting zone and track zone] by using

appropriate initial and boundary conditions. Effect of density (ρ),

Eddy viscosity (η), Slope angle (θ), Slab depth (R) on the flow

parameters have been observed in the present studies. Numerical

methods have been employed for computing the non linear differential

equations. One of the most interesting and fundamental innovation

in the present studies is getting initial condition for the computation

of velocity by numerical approach. This information of the velocity

has obtained through the concept of fracture mechanics applicable

to snow. The results on the flow parameters have found to be in

qualitative agreement with the published results.

Note that the study takes account of four variables: "Effect of density (ρ), Eddy viscosity (η), Slope angle (θ), Slab depth (R)" on the overall flow. These are relatively simple physical variables. I suggest that mathematical modelling and prediction of human flows would likely be much more complex, as there one is dealing with more than just the overarching 'pull factor' of gravity on each (human) 'particle'. For a start, the snow particles can only 'communicate' with one another via such means as capillarity and direct contact. The conscious human 'particles' have mobile phones, access to the media, stories on many grapevines etc, all of which affect their movement.

The United Nations revealed on Thursday a staggering 60 million people have been driven from their homes due to war and persecution.

That's up more than 8 million in the past 12 months, the largest annual increase on record. If those seeking asylum or displaced from their homes were a country, it would the 24th largest and contain one in every 122 citizens on earth.

( http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/national/refugee-policies-give-australias-global-reputation-a-beating-20150619-ghs7xt.html   [Published 20.06.15])

That is why I suggest that the most appropriate precedent and 'model' of the situtation we conceivably face is the gold rushes to Australia of the 1850s. As you may recall, over the course of the ten years 1851-61, that increased the non-Aboriginal population of Australia by a factor of 3.

From the same BT article and re just one boat: "Destitute, their future bleak as they are processed by Indonesian immigration officers, the tale of those on the boat is sadly familiar in a world gripped by a refugee crisis not seen since the second world war."

I would agree.

This user is a New Matilda supporter. MattQ
Posted Saturday, August 1, 2015 - 20:46

OP You're haring off into the distance, and I agree such modelling would be very difficult without access to historical data(masses of which are used to model stock-trading: ref Margin Call). I'm not so ambitious - I just want to gather the relevant historical data and produce some graphs of the past vs present.

From discussions with you this year, I suspect this is where we differ: in our internal models of human behaviour. Maybe. But I feel that even were I to prove that the numbers arriving still track historical relationships, you might claim this wave of emigration is unprecedented since the gold rush, rendering all data in-between irrelevant. That's your prerogative.

I need to know, right or wrong, and I need to know on my terms - data analysis. Anything else is just lazy. If it turns out I prove myself wrong, then national priority number 1 must be to stop refugees being created in the first place, and take some responsibilty for those we helped create. It's not ok that we did that for George Bush and his neocons. We can give billions to corporations, fine, but unless we're working on prevention, we're not working seriously on the number 1 concern, it seems, of Australians.

O. Puhleez
Posted Saturday, August 1, 2015 - 23:44

MQ:

.... If it turns out I prove myself wrong, [ie and that the numbers arriving do not still track historical relationships] then national priority number 1 must be to stop refugees being created in the first place, and take some responsibilty for those we helped create. It's not ok that we did that for George Bush and his neocons. We can give billions to corporations, fine, but unless we're working on prevention, we're not working seriously on the number 1 concern, it seems, of Australians.

There is no harm in that project, so good luck with it. With the part about stopping refugees being created, I completely agree. Where the pro-totalitarian Left (eg John Pilger) argue that 'the West' bears 100% of the responsibility for those refugees already created, I disagree strongly.

One thing for sure: this issue is not going away soon.

This user is a New Matilda supporter. MattQ
Posted Monday, August 3, 2015 - 09:19

It's a myriad interconnected issues that can't conceivably stop until we can agree on the core imbalances across modern, and now perhaps necessarily global, civilization. We'll start working on sane, human solutions, once we're allowed to bring these imbalances and their consequences up for debate.

Until then the 'conversation'(i.e the conversation about the conversation), necesarliy, obsesses on obfuscating the primary-coloured, dancing troop of elephants represented in the House. Much more instructive to play just 1 game of http://agar.io (btw don't play it it's really addictive...sry. <space>to split, <w> to give, but don't play, really don't)

We will inevitably choose equilibrium, eventually, once the consequences of the alternatives are inescapable, and not entirely escaped. But, yeah, thanks.