SOC 103A - AB, Report – T1, 2015 Page 1 Assessment Brief Program Bachelor of Applied Social Science Subject Developing Social Policy Subject code SOC 103A Name of assessment Assessment 2: Report on...

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SOC 103A - AB, Report – T1, 2015 Page 1 Assessment Brief Program Bachelor of Applied Social Science Subject Developing Social Policy Subject code SOC 103A Name of assessment Assessment 2: Report on Policy Process Length 1500 words Learning outcomes addressed by this assessment: This assessment examines students on learning outcomes A, b, d. Submission Date: Week 6 Lecturer Name Sadia Niyakan-Safy Assessment brief summary: Report on the key stages of the policy process. Total marks 100 marks Weighting 30% Students are advised that any submissions past the due date incur a 10% penalty per day, calculated from the total mark e.g. a task marked out of 40 will incur a 4 mark penalty per day. Please note: you must attempt all tasks in a subject to be eligible to pass the subject. More information, please refer to the Academic Progression Policy on http://www.think.edu.au/about-think/think- quality/our-policies. http://www.think.edu.au/about-think/think-quality/our-policies http://www.think.edu.au/about-think/think-quality/our-policies SOC 103A - AB, Report – T1, 2015 Page 2 Assessment Description: Research and write a report on the policy process using Australia’s Mandatory Detention policy as your policy for review. Utilizing your knowledge of the policy process and stages of policy formulation and implementation, critically discuss how this policy was planned, formulated and implemented. Explain whether any allowance has been made for the systematic evaluation of the policy. Pay particular attention to the issues of empowerment and participation during this process, and to equality, justice and fairness. If social policy is meant to produce greater equality, and to promote justice and fairness in society, explain whether this policy fulfills this objective. Marking Criteria: Max. in category Your points Word count, readability, and structure 10/100 Correct use of referencing style both in-text and in end reference list 10/100 Clear and well-structured discussion of the key stages of the policy process in relation to the chosen policy 40/100 Discussion of issues related to empowerment, participation and arrangements made for the evaluation of the policy. The student should also engage in a critical review of the policy and its effects. 40/100 Total: 100/100 Percentage Mark: /30% Comments: SOC 103A - AB, Report – T1, 2015 Page 3 Notes for assignments Please note essays should be written in font Times New Roman with font size 12. All references should comply with the APA 6th Edition referencing guide. All papers that are late without an approved extension will be penalized by 10% per day of the total possible marks for that assessment. Marks will be deducted for failure to adhere to the word count – as a general rule you may go over or under by 10% of the stated length. Students must attempt all assessments in the course to be eligible to pass the unit. This assignment will incorporate a formal introduction, main points and conclusion; The work must be fully referenced with in-text citations and a reference list at the end. We recommend you work with the APA 6th Edition Referencing Guide to ensure that you reference correctly. Correct academic writing and referencing are essential tasks that you need to learn. We recommend a minimum of ten references, unless instructed differently by your lecturer/tutor. Unless specifically instructed otherwise by your lecturer, any paper with less than ten references may be failed. Work that includes sources that are not properly referenced will not meet level 100 requirements and will be penalized. The assessment MUST be submitted electronically in Microsoft Word format. Other formats may not be readable by markers. Please be aware that any assessments submitted in other formats will be considered LATE and will lose marks until it is presented in Word. Notes for referencing: High quality work must be fully referenced with in-text citations and a reference list at the end. We recommend you work with the APA 6th Edition Referencing Guide to ensure that you reference correctly. Correct academic writing and referencing are essential tasks that you need to learn. References are assessed for their quality. You should draw on quality academic sources, such as books, chapters from edited books, journals etc. Your textbook can be used as a reference, but not the Study Guide and lecturer notes. We want to see evidence that you are capable of conducting your own research. Also, in order to help markers determine students’ understanding of the work they cite, all in-text references (not just direct quotes) must include the specific page number/s if shown in the original. Before preparing your assignment or own contribution, please review this YouTube video by clicking on the following link: Plagiarism: How to avoid it You can search for peer-reviewed journal articles, which you can find in the online journal databases and which can be accessed from the library homepage. Wikipedia, online dictionaries and online https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2q0NlWcTq1Y SOC 103A - AB, Report – T1, 2015 Page 4 encyclopedias are acceptable as a starting point to gain knowledge about a topic, but should not be overused – these should constitute no more than 10% of your total list of references/sources. Additional information and literature can be used where these are produced by legitimate sources, such as government departments, research institutes such as the NHMRC, or international organisations such as the World Health Organisation (WHO). Legitimate organisations and government departments produce peer reviewed reports and articles and are therefore very useful and mostly very current. The content of the following link explains why it is not acceptable to use non-peer reviewed websites: Why can't I just Google? (thanks to La Trobe University for this video). http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hqjJyqfceLw
Answered 2 days AfterMar 23, 2021SOC103ATorrens University Australia

Answer To: SOC 103A - AB, Report – T1, 2015 Page 1 Assessment Brief Program Bachelor of Applied Social Science...

Shreyashi answered on Mar 25 2021
140 Votes
Running Head: ASSESSMENT 2: REPORT ON POLICY PROCESS            1
ASSESSMENT 2: REPORT ON POLICY PROCESS                     5
BACHELOR OF APPLIED SOCIAL SCIENCE
DEVELOPING SOCIAL POLICY
SOC 103A
ASSESSMENT 2: REPORT ON POLICY PROCESS
Table of Contents
Introduction    3
The Mandatory Detention Policy    3
Why is this, the Harshest of all?    4
The History of Mandatory De
tention in Australia    4
How the Policy Excludes Australian Courts of Law    5
Breaching the Mandatory Detention Policy of Australia    6
Exceptions Even in Mandatory Detention Policy    6
Conclusion    7
References    8
Introduction
The Australian detention policy is one of the harshest detention policies in the history of the detention policies of different countries. As mentioned by McAllister (2018), detention mainly takes place to hold the immigrants lawfully accountable for their illegal actions. After detention, the immigrants are held in a detention centre in order to carry out further investigation or to send them back to their own country. A holding facility is provided for the immigrants to stay. Although the rules differ from one country to another, but in this case, you are allowed to make one free local phone call to your friend, lawyer, family or anyone you like.
The Mandatory Detention Policy
The mandatory migration policy was established in the year 1958 under the name Migration Act SECT 189. As mentioned by Phillips (2017), the mandatory detention policy of Australia states that anyone, who is not an Australian citizen but does not stay in Australia, should be immediately detained. They are kept in the detention centre until they can manage a valid visa for themselves or until they leave the country. However, by no means, can they stay free in the land of Australia.
The mandatory detention of visa applies even to those people who overstay their welcome for any reason and have not updated their visa. People who breach their visa consequences also face the similar kind of issues. It is very difficult, nearly impossible for anyone to overstay or breach their visa conditions and get away with it when they are staying in the land of Australia.
There were four options available to the people who were held in the detention centre. Firstly, they can be removed from the land of Australia. Secondly, an officer is assigned in order to deal with those immigrants in order to solve the problem they are facing, if any. Thirdly, they need to be deported to their own homeland. Fourth and last, that person is granted a visa.
Why is this, the Harshest of all?
Well, a one-line answer to this question would be, not even kids are spared from this mandatory detention policy. The policy states that if a child breaches their visa conditions or somehow overstays even, they will be arrested until a solution comes up. Before the 1990s, not everyone who lived in Australia without a visa was detained. There was uncertain rule for few people and the laws were not very rigid or even mandatory to be followed.
Some children and families arrive in Australia on one type of visa, for instance a tourist visa and then apply for protection as a refugee. As informed by Fleay (2017), if a family or child seeks asylum while the original visa is valid, the Department will usually issue a bridging visa pending the outcome of their application so that the person is not detained. Although if a family applies for wanting to be a refugee in the country after the expiration of their visa, the officials, by all means, can mandatorily...
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