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    Open Access

    Building a New Life in Australia (BNLA): The Longitudinal Study of Humanitarian Migrants

    Identifier: 0d9e0d92-7fbe-49f6-92fb-55a57b83e87b

    Description

    Building a New Life in Australia: The Longitudinal Study of Humanitarian Migrants (BNLA) aims to identify factors which help or hinder positive settlement outcomes. BNLA follows 1,509 humanitarian migrating units who arrived in Australia or had their permanent visas granted in the six months between May and December 2013. Participants include offshore visa holders who arrived in Australia holding a permanent humanitarian visa and onshore visa holders who received their permanent protection visa between May and December 2013. Wave 1 took place from October 2013 to March 2014 interviewing 2,399 principal and secondary applicants. The first five waves of data collection were conducted annually. Waves 1, 3 and 5 interviews were conducted face-to-face and waves 2 and 4 interviews were conducted by telephone. Wave 6 was conducted 5 years after wave 5, between January and July 2023. Wave 6 data was collected online and face-to-face. The survey and participant materials were translated into 14 languages in wave 1, 9 languages in waves 2 - 5 and 5 languages in Wave 6. Interviews were conducted by bilingual interviewers; some interviews also used interpreters (interviews were conducted in nineteen languages in total in waves 1 and 2, thirteen languages in Wave 3, eleven languages in Wave 4, and ten languages in Wave 5 and seven languages in wave 6). For waves 2 and 4, shorter telephone interviews omit some of the questions asked in the longer face-to-face interviews. Topics covered by the study include: demographics, immigration experience, housing and neighbourhood, English language proficiency, education and training, employment and income, health, self-sufficiency, community support, personal resources and life satisfaction, and life in Australia. Additional modules include the child module in Wave 3, childcare and gender roles from Wave 5 and the COVID-19 and youth module in Wave 6. Researchers interested in using this data should note: (1) BNLA does not include data about migrants in the family and skilled streams of the permanent Migration Program; (2) BNLA only includes humanitarian migrants who arrived/were granted a visa during a specific time period; (3) Analysis at the state level is not possible.

    Created at: 07 Aug 2025 04:32 PM

    Employment Housing Education Family Health Communities English language Groups Refugees Mental illness Australia Humanitarian migrants Immigration Translation services Self perception Stress

    Researchers


    Publication Details

    Australian Government Department of Social Services

    2013


    Subjects

    Fields of Research (FOR)  


    4702 Cultural studies  


    470211 Migrant cultural studies  



    10 Reduced Inequalities  



    Care Economics, Social and Policy  


    Access

    Available with Approval

    https://dataverse.ada.edu.au/dataverse/bnla

    [email protected]

    Data Information

    2013 - 2024

    Australia

    ASGS - Remoteness Areas

    5