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4 - The Stock Narrative of Becoming a Refugee

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2024

Anthea Vogl
Affiliation:
University of Technology, Sydney
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Summary

This chapter argues that a distinct stock story of who refugees are and how they behave, which it describes as the ‘stock narrative of becoming a refugee’, featured throughout the hearings. This stock story is one version of how, when and why ‘genuine’ refugees decide to leave their home countries and seek refugee status in another state. The chapter analyses the extent to which this prescriptive narrative conforms with international and domestic definitions of refugee status, to show that the normative expectations embedded within the stock tale far exceed the legal basis for refugee protection. Nonetheless this story, with its distinct narrative form, was demanded of refugee applicants during oral hearings and structured how decision-makers tested and judged applicants’ evidence and credibility. While decision-makers frequently demanded evidence that conformed to the stock narrative of authentic refugeehood – or that applicants to account for deviations from this narrative – refugee applicants also implicitly or explicitly contested or resisted this demand when presenting their oral testimony.

Type
Chapter
Information
Judging Refugees
Narrative and Oral Testimony in Refugee Status Determination
, pp. 66 - 89
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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