Abstract

The Sustainable Development Goals 2030 call for an end to poverty in all its forms everywhere through the adoption of integrated social protection policies. However, recent literature suggests an implicit and explicit discrimination towards asylum seekers and refugees (ASRs) in United Kingdom social policy, leading to high rates of destitution, poor health and isolation. Due to the limited nature of UK government support, many ASRs become involved with semi-formal and informal social protection. This systematic literature review synthesizes existing qualitative literature that documents the impact of these interventions on the wellbeing of adult ASRs in the United Kingdom. The literature offers useful insights into asylum seeker and refugee perceptions of wellbeing, agency, and support responsibility, and how their interaction with social protection providers constrains or enables the realization of their fundamental human needs. The findings demonstrate that government support is inadequate to meet the needs of many asylum seekers and refugees, leading to disempowerment, lack of agency and exploitation. Positive wellbeing outcomes are linked to semi-formal and informal interventions, summarized into six categories: the positive impact of volunteering; physical space and intentional gathering; practical and material support; training and skills development; solidarity, inclusion and understanding; and peer support and advice.

Highlights

  • The Sustainable Development Goals 2030 call for an end to poverty in all its forms everywhere through the adoption of integrated social protection and development policies that foster inclusive societies where no one is left behind (UN 2015a, 2015b)

  • The meta-aggregation process extracted 209 findings from 23 papers concerning the impact of participation in semi-formal or informal social protection interventions on the selfreported wellbeing of adult asylum seekers and refugees (ASRs) in the United Kingdom

  • The asylum seekers and refugees highlighted in the findings came from a wide variety of countries and included both male and female respondents

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Summary

Introduction

The Sustainable Development Goals 2030 call for an end to poverty in all its forms everywhere through the adoption of integrated social protection and development policies that foster inclusive societies where no one is left behind (UN 2015a, 2015b). Asylum application waiting times have increased substantially in recent years (Sturge 2019; Walsh 2019), with a 68% increase in the number of initial decisions taking more than six months between March 2019 and March 2020 alone (Refugee Council 2020). These policies could be viewed as structural violence (Rylko-Bauer and Farmer 2016), given that housing, employment, and social networks are key determinants of physical and mental health (Carter and El Hassan 2003; Seppala et al 2013; Dahlgren and Whitehead 2015; Bakker et al 2016)

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