Applying the theory of resource curse to disadvantaged migrant communities and criminal offending: Vietnamese Australians and the heroin trade as a case study
Australia has a substantial Vietnamese community, a consequence of the refugee exodus from Southeast Asia which followed the Communist victory in Vietnam in 1975. While Vietnamese Australians have contributed greatly to their host society, they are also stigmatised because of an association with the trade in illicit drugs, particularly heroin. Drug-related offending remains very high in Vietnamese Australian communities, with resultant high rates of incarceration and social exclusion. In its formative years the Vietnamese Australian community was faced with exclusion from economic and social opportunity, but was uniquely well-positioned as an ethnic enclave economy to take advantage of the growing demand for illicit drugs, especially heroin. I argue that the heroin trade had an effect analogous to ‘resource curse’, and has been a major source of continuing disadvantage and social harm to the Vietnamese Australian community.
History
Location
Melbourne, Vic.
Open access
Yes
Language
eng
Publication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
Copyright notice
2014, Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation, Deakin University
Journal
Citizenship and Globalisation Research Paper Series
Volume
5
Pagination
1-28
ISSN
1838-2118
eISSN
1838-2126
Issue
1
Publisher
Centre for Citizenship and Globalisation, Deakin University