Article info
Current Controversy
Prolonged immigration detention, complicity and boycotts
- Correspondence to Professor David Isaacs, The Children’s Hospital at Westmead, Locked Bag 4001, Westmead, NSW 2145, Australia; david.isaacs{at}health.nsw.gov.au
Citation
Prolonged immigration detention, complicity and boycotts
Publication history
- Received December 28, 2016
- Revised July 1, 2017
- Accepted July 11, 2017
- First published August 9, 2017.
Online issue publication
January 31, 2018
Article Versions
- Previous version (31 January 2018).
- You are viewing the most recent version of this article.
Request permissions
If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.
Copyright information
© Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.
Other content recommended for you
- Are healthcare professionals working in Australia's immigration detention centres condoning torture?
- Doctors should boycott working in Australia’s immigration centres and must continue to speak out on mistreatment of detainees—despite the law
- Should doctors boycott working in Australia’s immigration detention centres?
- Should clinicians boycott Australian immigration detention?
- Preventive detention: the ethical ground where politics and health meet. Focus on asylum seekers in Australia
- Is Australia engaged in torturing asylum seekers? A cautionary tale for Europe
- Dirty work: well-intentioned mental health workers cannot ameliorate harms in offshore detention
- Medical involvement in torture today?
- Nursing in asylum seeker detention in Australia: care, rights and witnessing
- Torture, healthcare and Australian immigration detention