Abstract

In this article, I focus on gender identity and gender expression as grounds for international protection. After clarifying issues of terminology and theoretical framework, namely Transgender Studies, I criticize the current framework for determining membership in a Particular Social Group (PSG) for the purposes of the Refugee Convention, drawing on Berg and Millbank's work on the concept of self-identification and gender non-conformity as a means to assess transgender asylum claims (2013). I problematize the issues arising in the assessment of well-founded fear of persecution and the form it may take in transgender and gender non-conforming asylum claims. Drawing connections between sexuality and gender identity/expression claims, I attempt to provide a humanizing and depathologized framework for assessing the credibility of transgender and gender non-conforming applicants. Finally, by critiquing the work of Hathaway and Pobjoy and drawing from current human rights norms, I reflect on how to make good law with transgender cases without reproducing medicalized notions of gender identity or placing all the burden of proof on the applicants. In so doing, this article attempts to achieve a balance between theoretical and practical challenges that arise in the Refugee Status Determination (RSD) process involving transgender and gender non-conforming applicants. This article serves as an attempt to critically review the existing scholarship within the framework of transgender studies and offers insights for a refined framework of refugee status determination based on an inclusive reading of Particular Social Group and persecution drawing on the reading of crucial case law from anglophone countries.

Highlights

  • Mariza Avgeri*Reviewed by: Senthorun Raj, Keele University, United Kingdom Shiva Nourpanah, University of Guelph, Canada

  • According to Principle 23 of the Yogyakarta Principles, a human rights’ experts’ initiative promulgated in 2006 and revised in 2017, States shall: Ensure that a well-founded fear of persecution on the basis of sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression or sex characteristics is accepted as a ground for the recognition of refugee status, including where sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression or sex characteristics are criminalized and such laws, directly or indirectly, create or contribute to an oppressive environment of intolerance and a climate of discrimination and violence

  • Assess Transgender and Gender Nonconforming Asylum. Though this formulation is quite explicit and gender identity can be grounds for asylum under EU law1, there are many issues arising in the application of the refugee criteria in transgender/gender non-conforming applicants

Read more

Summary

Mariza Avgeri*

Reviewed by: Senthorun Raj, Keele University, United Kingdom Shiva Nourpanah, University of Guelph, Canada. After clarifying issues of terminology and theoretical framework, namely Transgender Studies, I criticize the current framework for determining membership in a Particular Social Group (PSG) for the purposes of the Refugee Convention, drawing on Berg and Millbank’s work on the concept of self-identification and gender non-conformity as a means to assess transgender asylum claims (2013). Drawing connections between sexuality and gender identity/expression claims, I attempt to provide a humanizing and depathologized framework for assessing the credibility of transgender and gender non-conforming applicants. This article serves as an attempt to critically review the existing scholarship within the framework of transgender studies and offers insights for a refined framework of refugee status determination based on an inclusive reading of Particular Social Group and persecution drawing on the reading of crucial case law from anglophone countries

INTRODUCTION
Assess Transgender and Gender Nonconforming Asylum
Transgender Studies in Refugee Law
CRITERIA OF INCLUSION IN A PSG
Discretion and the HJ Test
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call