This article examines Canadian refugee law cases involving domestic violence, analyzed through a comparison with cases involving forced sterilization and genital cutting. Surveying 645 reported decisions, it suggests that Canadian adjudicators generally adopted different methods of analysis in refugee cases involving domestic violence, as compared with these other claims. The article argues that Canadian adjudicators rarely recognized domestic violence as a rights violation in itself but, instead, demonstrated a general predisposition toward finding domestic violence persecution in cultural difference. That is, adjudicators tended to recognize domestic violence claimants not as victims of persecutory practices but rather as victims of perse...
Women and children make up the vast majority of the world’s refugee population. However, in the Unit...
This article explains some of the unique problems faced by battered immigrant women and offers creat...
For over a decade, women seeking asylum from persecution inflicted by their abusive husbands and par...
This article examines Canadian refugee law cases involving domestic violence, analyzed through a com...
Women who escape domestic violence with their children are being denied refugee status in Canada on ...
This article explores the problematic interaction of the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of In...
In Canadian refugee law, women asylum seekers experience significant evidentiary hurdles, specifical...
Canadian jurists and policy makers have recognized that domestic violence is pervasive across econom...
In Liberalism and the Limits of Inclusion: Race and Immigration Law in the Americas, Cook-Mart...
In this paper, the author presents an overview of the evolution of gender-related issues in the dete...
Refugees are the most vulnerable people in the world who flee from homeland for saving life because ...
From publisher: This article presents a mixed-methods study of domestic-violence-related claims for ...
In this Note, Anita Sinha examines the treatment of asylum claims involving gender-related persecuti...
In 1993, Canada was the first country to formally open its doors to refugees fleeing gender-related ...
This article reviews 16 years of Canadian case law applying the Refugee Convention’s exclusion provi...
Women and children make up the vast majority of the world’s refugee population. However, in the Unit...
This article explains some of the unique problems faced by battered immigrant women and offers creat...
For over a decade, women seeking asylum from persecution inflicted by their abusive husbands and par...
This article examines Canadian refugee law cases involving domestic violence, analyzed through a com...
Women who escape domestic violence with their children are being denied refugee status in Canada on ...
This article explores the problematic interaction of the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of In...
In Canadian refugee law, women asylum seekers experience significant evidentiary hurdles, specifical...
Canadian jurists and policy makers have recognized that domestic violence is pervasive across econom...
In Liberalism and the Limits of Inclusion: Race and Immigration Law in the Americas, Cook-Mart...
In this paper, the author presents an overview of the evolution of gender-related issues in the dete...
Refugees are the most vulnerable people in the world who flee from homeland for saving life because ...
From publisher: This article presents a mixed-methods study of domestic-violence-related claims for ...
In this Note, Anita Sinha examines the treatment of asylum claims involving gender-related persecuti...
In 1993, Canada was the first country to formally open its doors to refugees fleeing gender-related ...
This article reviews 16 years of Canadian case law applying the Refugee Convention’s exclusion provi...
Women and children make up the vast majority of the world’s refugee population. However, in the Unit...
This article explains some of the unique problems faced by battered immigrant women and offers creat...
For over a decade, women seeking asylum from persecution inflicted by their abusive husbands and par...