'It still matters': The role of skin colour in the everyday life and realities of black African migrants and refugees in Australia

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Udah, Hyacinth;Singh, Parlo
Abstract

This article looks at the everyday life and realities of some of Australia’s most recent immigrant communities, by shedding light on the experiences of black Africans in Queensland. Particularly, this article examines the experiences of black African migrants and refugees living in South East Queensland, to better understand how race, skin colour and immigration status interact to shape their everyday lives and social location in Australia. Data were collected from 30 participants using qualitative research methods. The theoretical approach employed synthesises concepts from identity, blackness, race and racism, whiteness and critical race theory. The subjective experiences of the participants interviewed indicate that skin colour still matters in determining life chances for black Africans in Australia. While the empirical focus is specific to Australia, this article contributes to the research literature in valuable ways, both from a theoretical perspective and in terms of a comparative contextualisation of racism.

Journal

Australasian Review of African Studies

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Volume

39

ISBN/ISSN

1447-8420

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Issue

2

Pages Count

29

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Publisher

African Studies Association of Australasia and the Pacific

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Publisher Location

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Publish Date

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Date

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EISSN

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DOI

10.22160/22035184/ARAS-2018-39-2/19-47