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Self-represented witnessing: the use of social media by asylum seekers in Australia’s offshore immigration detention centres

journal contribution
posted on 2018-05-01, 00:00 authored by Maria RaeMaria Rae, Rosa Holman, Amy NetheryAmy Nethery
The act of witnessing connects audiences with distant suffering. But what happens when bearing witness becomes severely restricted? External parties, including the mainstream news media, are constrained from accessing Australia’s offshore immigration detention centres. The effect is that people seeking asylum are hidden from the public and excluded from national debates. Some detainees have adopted social media as a platform to communicate their stories of flight, and their experiences of immigration detention, to a wider audience. This article examines the ways in which social media, and particularly Facebook, has facilitated what we call self-represented witnessing. We analyse two public Facebook pages to assess how detainees use such social media networks to document their experiences, and we observe the interaction between detainees, other social media users and mainstream media. Significantly, these social media networks enable detained asylum seekers to conduct an unmediated form of self-represented witnessing that exposes human rights abuses and documents justice claims.

History

Journal

Media, culture and society

Volume

40

Issue

4

Pagination

479 - 495

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

0163-4437

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2017, The Authors

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