The High Court of Australia\u27s recent Khawar decision marked a significant step forward in the progression toward universal recognition of gender violence as a legitimate basis for asylum. The guidelines regarding gender-related claims issued by the UNHCR in May 2002 further encouraged this progress. The Khawar decision recognized that asylum is appropriate when the applicant\u27s home government persecutes the applicant by tolerating or condoning the violence of non-state actors. After Khawar, Australia stands with Canada, New Zealand, and the U.K. in recognizing gender violence as a basis for asylum. Adjudicators in the United States should note the tide and consider adopting the Khawar reasoning
Since the 1980s some feminist legal scholars have challenged the gender-neutral facade of internatio...
In this paper, the author presents an overview of the evolution of gender-related issues in the dete...
This Article explains the particular difficulties that female asylum seekers and survivors of gender...
The High Court of Australia\u27s recent Khawar decision marked a significant step forward in the pro...
Refugees are the most vulnerable people in the world who flee from homeland for saving life because ...
In this Note, Anita Sinha examines the treatment of asylum claims involving gender-related persecuti...
Women and children make up the vast majority of the world’s refugee population. However, in the Unit...
In Canadian refugee law, women asylum seekers experience significant evidentiary hurdles, specifical...
The ripple effects on refugee protection from the events of August and September 2001, arising out o...
Over the past decades, gender-based persecution has moved into the forefront of the immigration poli...
The faces of refugees are overwhelmingly female: women and children represent over 80 per cent of th...
Islam v Secretary of State for the Home Department, R v Immigration Appeal Tribunal and Another, ex ...
The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (hereinafter UNHCR ) estimates that...
Over the past twenty years, women’s human rights advocates have made significant gains in securing p...
Women’s experiences of violence often remain invisible or discounted in asylum law and practice. Gen...
Since the 1980s some feminist legal scholars have challenged the gender-neutral facade of internatio...
In this paper, the author presents an overview of the evolution of gender-related issues in the dete...
This Article explains the particular difficulties that female asylum seekers and survivors of gender...
The High Court of Australia\u27s recent Khawar decision marked a significant step forward in the pro...
Refugees are the most vulnerable people in the world who flee from homeland for saving life because ...
In this Note, Anita Sinha examines the treatment of asylum claims involving gender-related persecuti...
Women and children make up the vast majority of the world’s refugee population. However, in the Unit...
In Canadian refugee law, women asylum seekers experience significant evidentiary hurdles, specifical...
The ripple effects on refugee protection from the events of August and September 2001, arising out o...
Over the past decades, gender-based persecution has moved into the forefront of the immigration poli...
The faces of refugees are overwhelmingly female: women and children represent over 80 per cent of th...
Islam v Secretary of State for the Home Department, R v Immigration Appeal Tribunal and Another, ex ...
The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (hereinafter UNHCR ) estimates that...
Over the past twenty years, women’s human rights advocates have made significant gains in securing p...
Women’s experiences of violence often remain invisible or discounted in asylum law and practice. Gen...
Since the 1980s some feminist legal scholars have challenged the gender-neutral facade of internatio...
In this paper, the author presents an overview of the evolution of gender-related issues in the dete...
This Article explains the particular difficulties that female asylum seekers and survivors of gender...