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5 ways to tackle Australia’s backlog of asylum cases

  • Written by Daniel Ghezelbash, Professor and Director, Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law, UNSW Law & Justice, UNSW Sydney

People who apply for asylum in Australia face significant delays in having their claims processed. These delays undermine the integrity of the asylum system, erode public confidence and cause significant distress to people seeking asylum.

There are, at the time of writing, 28,691 applications[1] for a protection visa awaiting a decision at the Department of Home Affairs. At least 43,308 applications[2] await review at the Administrative Review Tribunal.

For people seeking asylum who have their initial applications refused and seek review in the Administrative Review Tribunal and in the Federal Circuit and Family Court, the process can often take more than ten years[3].

Whoever wins the upcoming election inherits the daunting task of addressing this issue.

Our research evaluated[4] data on Australia’s previous attempts to increase efficiency of asylum processing. We also examined international best practice for designing fair and fast procedures, including lessons[5] from recent successful asylum reforms in Switzerland.

Here are five ways to make Australia’s asylum process more efficient.

1. Recognise fairness enhances efficiency

In most countries with asylum systems, processing is neither fair nor fast[6].

When trying to increase efficiency, many governments have limited the ability of a person seeking asylum to fairly put forward their case.

Australia, the United States, and many countries across Europe[7] have introduced accelerated or fast-track procedures that drop essential safeguards including:

  • the right to an interview
  • access to legal assistance, and
  • the opportunity to respond to information that undermines their claim for asylum.

But these efforts don’t just undermine fairness. They also contribute to slower processing.

Such measures tend to lead to more appeals, and more cases being overturned by courts and tribunals. This contributes to longer delays.

Our research[8] into Australia’s now-abolished fast-track[9] procedures demonstrates this. This policy was introduced by the Coalition government in 2014, with the aim of speeding up processing and reducing the backlog of asylum applications.

It included the creation of a new streamlined review process before the Immigration Assessment Authority. Applicants were generally not interviewed or allowed to put forward new information.

The resulting system was not only unfair; it was also excruciatingly slow.

Four in five cases were appealed to the court. About 37% of these were overturned. The delays created by increased litigation clearly counteracted any time saved.

One of the best ways to improve the efficiency of asylum processing is to ensure applicants can present their cases effectively from the outset.

Protesters hold signs during a rally for refugee rights outside Parliament House in Canberra, Tuesday, October 17, 2023
The ‘fast-track’ system was not only unfair, it was excruciatingly slow. AAP Image/Mick Tsikas[10]

2. Fund legal representation for those who can’t afford a lawyer

Research[11] shows legal assistance increases efficiency[12].

Lawyers can help[13] assist people to prepare and present their case properly, and ensure that they get a fair hearing (reducing the chance of a lengthy appeal).

Promisingly, in 2023 the federal government announced[14] A$48 million in funding for legal services for people seeking asylum.

It’s crucial this funding is maintained, and is sufficient to meet demand.

3. Invest in decision-makers

Once a person lodges their claim for asylum, it’s first assessed by the Department of Home Affairs. If the application is denied, the applicant can seek review at the Administrative Review Tribunal, which reassesses the merits of the application.

If the tribunal rejects the claim, the court can conduct a limited review focusing only on whether the decision was lawfully made.

A fast process is only possible if we have enough of all these decision-makers across the system.

This requires investment in training and hiring suitably qualified decision-makers who are equipped to handle the volume and complexity of asylum claims.

This is underway. The federal government has invested[15] $58 million in October 2023 towards hiring additional Administrative Review Tribunal members and Federal Circuit and Family Court judges for asylum cases. It’s also hiring more staff at the Department of Home Affairs.

Australia’s next government should consider taking a data-driven approach to calculate the decision-making capacity required for existing and future caseload.

The Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia.
Some decisions on asylum seeker applications end up being appealed in court. AP Photo/Mark Baker[16]

4. Prioritise simple cases for faster processing

Not all asylum cases are equally complex; some can be resolved relatively quickly.

Australia needs a robust and transparent triaging system to identify and prioritise simpler cases for faster processing.

This would significantly improve overall efficiency and allow decision-makers to focus on more complex cases.

The Department of Home Affairs’ current approach to triaging is a “last in, first out[17]” system that prioritises new asylum applications for rapid processing.

However, this leads to substantial unfairness for applicants who lodged their claims earlier, who may face long processing delays.

The department needs an approach to streaming based on case complexity[18], to ensure all cases are finalised as quickly as possible.

5. Better coordination across decision-making bodies

The various bodies involved in asylum processing – including the Administrative Review Tribunal, the Federal Circuit and Family Court and the Department of Home Affairs – need to coordinate to improve efficiency and cut delays.

Any government reforms aimed at increasing the efficiency of asylum procedures must be system-wide.

By taking a holistic view, we can ensure that increased efficiency at one stage does not inadvertently create bottlenecks or inefficiencies in another.

A fundamental shift

Overall, Australia needs a fundamental shift that recognises fairness contributes to, rather than detracts from efficiency.

That shift is essential for developing a fair and fast asylum process that will serve the best interests of applicants, the government and the Australian public.

References

  1. ^ 28,691 applications (www.homeaffairs.gov.au)
  2. ^ 43,308 applications (www.art.gov.au)
  3. ^ more than ten years (www.unsw.edu.au)
  4. ^ evaluated (academic.oup.com)
  5. ^ lessons (www.unsw.edu.au)
  6. ^ neither fair nor fast (www.justsecurity.org)
  7. ^ Australia, the United States, and many countries across Europe (papers.ssrn.com)
  8. ^ research (academic.oup.com)
  9. ^ fast-track (www.unsw.edu.au)
  10. ^ AAP Image/Mick Tsikas (photos.aap.com.au)
  11. ^ Research (academic.oup.com)
  12. ^ efficiency (theconversation.com)
  13. ^ Lawyers can help (track.smtpsendmail.com)
  14. ^ announced (theconversation.com)
  15. ^ invested (theconversation.com)
  16. ^ AP Photo/Mark Baker (photos.aap.com.au)
  17. ^ last in, first out (www.theguardian.com)
  18. ^ case complexity (www.unsw.edu.au)

Authors: Daniel Ghezelbash, Professor and Director, Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law, UNSW Law & Justice, UNSW Sydney

Read more https://theconversation.com/5-ways-to-tackle-australias-backlog-of-asylum-cases-254071

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