asylum$5571$ - meaning and definition. What is asylum$5571$
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What (who) is asylum$5571$ - definition

INDIVIDUAL WHO SEEKS REFUGE, ESP. POLITICAL ASYLUM, IN A FOREIGN COUNTRY
Asylum seekers; Asylum-seeker; Asylum Seekers; Asylum-seekers; Seeking asylum; Seek asylum; Asylum seeking; Claiming asylum; Claim asylum; Asylee; Rights of asylum seekers; Seeking Asylum; Asylum claim; Claimed asylum; Claim for asylum

political asylum         
  • Notre-Dame de Paris]] (France)
  • Plaque at [[St. Mary Magdalene Chapel, Dingli]], [[Malta]], indicating that the chapel did not enjoy ecclesiastical immunity
  • nl}})
  • Tyrol]]
  • Remains of one of four medieval stone boundary markers for the [[sanctuary]] of Saint [[John of Beverley]] in the [[East Riding of Yorkshire]]
JURIDICAL NOTION
Political asylum; Political refugee; Political refugees; Right to asylum; Right for asylum; Political asylee; Political Asylum; Right of Asylum; Holly Ann Collins; OFPRA; Religious asylum; Right of sanctuary; Asylum protection; Right to seek asylum
Political asylum is the right to live in a foreign country and is given by the government of that country to people who have to leave their own country for political reasons.
...a university teacher who is seeking political asylum in Britain...
N-UNCOUNT
lunatic asylum         
  • [[Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 7th Earl of Shaftesbury]], a vigorous campaigner for the reform of lunacy law in England, and the Head of the [[Lunacy Commission]] for 40 years.
  • Views of Toledo State Hospital for the Insane
  • Eastern State Hospital]] was the first psychiatric institution to be founded in the United States.
  • Egas Moniz]] pioneered the field of [[psychosurgery]] with the lobotomy of a patient's frontal lobes in 1935.
  • Dr. Philippe Pinel at the [[Salpêtrière]], 1795 by [[Tony Robert-Fleury]]. Pinel ordering the removal of chains from patients at the Paris Asylum for insane women.
  • [[William A. F. Browne]] was an influential reformer of the lunatic asylum in the mid-19th century, and an advocate of the new 'science' of [[phrenology]].
  • alt=A map of the original Bethlem Hospital site
  • The [[York Retreat]] (c. 1796) was built by [[William Tuke]], a pioneer of moral treatment for the insane.
  • [[Leningrad Special Psychiatric Hospital of Prison Type of the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs]] was a psychiatric institution used by the Soviet authorities to suppress dissent.
  • The joint counties' lunatic asylum, erected at [[Abergavenny]], 1850
  • Advertisement for Thorazine (chlorpromazine) from the early 1960s<ref>The text reads: ''When the patient lashes out against "them" – THORAZINE (brand of chlorpromazine) quickly puts an end to his violent outburst. 'Thorazine' is especially effective when the psychotic episode is triggered by delusions or [[hallucination]]s. At the outset of treatment, Thorazine's combination of antipsychotic and sedative effects provides both emotional and physical calming. Assaultive or destructive behavior is rapidly controlled. As therapy continues, the initial sedative effect gradually disappears. But the antipsychotic effect continues, helping to dispel or modify delusions, hallucinations and confusion, while keeping the patient calm and approachable. SMITH KLINE AND FRENCH LABORATORIES leaders in psychopharmaceutical research.''</ref>
OLD NAME FOR A PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITAL
Insane asylum; Mental asylum; Insane asylums; Mental asylums; Lunatic Asylum; Insane Asylum; History of Psychiatric Hospitals; History of psychiatric hospitals; Lunatic asylums; Looney bins; Loony bins; History of psychiatric institutions
(lunatic asylums)
A lunatic asylum was a place where mentally disturbed people used to be locked up. (OLD-FASHIONED)
N-COUNT
lunatic asylum         
  • [[Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 7th Earl of Shaftesbury]], a vigorous campaigner for the reform of lunacy law in England, and the Head of the [[Lunacy Commission]] for 40 years.
  • Views of Toledo State Hospital for the Insane
  • Eastern State Hospital]] was the first psychiatric institution to be founded in the United States.
  • Egas Moniz]] pioneered the field of [[psychosurgery]] with the lobotomy of a patient's frontal lobes in 1935.
  • Dr. Philippe Pinel at the [[Salpêtrière]], 1795 by [[Tony Robert-Fleury]]. Pinel ordering the removal of chains from patients at the Paris Asylum for insane women.
  • [[William A. F. Browne]] was an influential reformer of the lunatic asylum in the mid-19th century, and an advocate of the new 'science' of [[phrenology]].
  • alt=A map of the original Bethlem Hospital site
  • The [[York Retreat]] (c. 1796) was built by [[William Tuke]], a pioneer of moral treatment for the insane.
  • [[Leningrad Special Psychiatric Hospital of Prison Type of the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs]] was a psychiatric institution used by the Soviet authorities to suppress dissent.
  • The joint counties' lunatic asylum, erected at [[Abergavenny]], 1850
  • Advertisement for Thorazine (chlorpromazine) from the early 1960s<ref>The text reads: ''When the patient lashes out against "them" – THORAZINE (brand of chlorpromazine) quickly puts an end to his violent outburst. 'Thorazine' is especially effective when the psychotic episode is triggered by delusions or [[hallucination]]s. At the outset of treatment, Thorazine's combination of antipsychotic and sedative effects provides both emotional and physical calming. Assaultive or destructive behavior is rapidly controlled. As therapy continues, the initial sedative effect gradually disappears. But the antipsychotic effect continues, helping to dispel or modify delusions, hallucinations and confusion, while keeping the patient calm and approachable. SMITH KLINE AND FRENCH LABORATORIES leaders in psychopharmaceutical research.''</ref>
OLD NAME FOR A PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITAL
Insane asylum; Mental asylum; Insane asylums; Mental asylums; Lunatic Asylum; Insane Asylum; History of Psychiatric Hospitals; History of psychiatric hospitals; Lunatic asylums; Looney bins; Loony bins; History of psychiatric institutions
Madhouse, bedlam, insane asylum, insane hospital, hospital for the insane.

Wikipedia

Asylum seeker

An asylum seeker is a person who leaves their country of residence, enters another country and applies for asylum (i.e., international protection) in that other country. An asylum seeker is an immigrant who has been forcibly displaced and might have fled their home country because of war or other factors harming them or their family. If their case is accepted, they become considered a refugee. The terms asylum seeker, refugee and illegal immigrant are often confused.

A person becomes an asylum seeker by making a formal application for the right to remain in another country and keeps that status until the application has been concluded. The relevant immigration authorities of the country of asylum determine whether the asylum seeker will be granted protection and become an officially recognized refugee or whether asylum will be refused and the asylum seeker becomes an illegal immigrant who may be asked to leave the country and may even be deported.

In North American English, the term asylee is also used. An asylee can either be an asylum seeker, as defined above, or a person whose claim for asylum was accepted and asylum was granted. On average, about 1 million people apply for asylum every year.

The asylum seeker may be recognised as a refugee and given refugee status if their circumstances fall into the definition of refugee according to the 1951 Refugee Convention or other refugee laws—such as the European Convention on Human Rights, if asylum is claimed within the European Union. However, signatories to the refugee convention create their own policies for assessing the protection status of asylum seekers, and the proportion of asylum applicants who are accepted or rejected varies each year from country to country.