This article critically appraises Canadian Immigration and Refugee Board decision-making that imposes burdens on diverse sexual orientation and gender identity and expression refugee claimants of colour to prove that they are queer according to homonationalist interpretations of queerness. This article examines decisions clustered around historical developments in the reception of racialized sexual minorities, including Canada (AG) v Ward, which made sexual minority refugee claims possible; Bill C-31, the immigration and refugee policy motivated by national security interests in the post-9/11 era; and 2017 guidelines designed to dispel misunderstandings about refugee claimants’ sexuality. Across this history, credibility assessments of refu...
This article examines the use of country information in determining claims for refugee status based ...
Who is the ‘queer refugee’? How do we manage their feelings, emotions and experiences when assessing...
European and Finnish national legislation and jurisprudence leave asylum decision-makerswith a wide ...
This article critically appraises Canadian Immigration and Refugee Board decision-making that impose...
Canada’s current definition of a refugee includes those facing persecution on account of sexual orie...
Canada offers refugee protection to sexual minorities facing persecution abroad. While success rates...
This article suggests that there are reasons to be concerned about the way relationship history impa...
Book Review: Real Queer? Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Refugees in the Canadian Refu...
Refugee and forced migration studies have focused primarily on the refugees’ countries of origin and...
Since the early 1990s Canada has become a primary destination for individuals who make refugee claim...
This article discusses refugee determination from an intersectional perspective to unpack the impact...
Most of the scholarship on queer and trans migrants focuses on the refugee experience post-migration...
Over the past decade, the Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) of Canada has granted asylum to severa...
This article draws upon psychological and sociological literature to explore the issues that arise i...
This article examines the use of country information in determining claims for refugee status based ...
This article examines the use of country information in determining claims for refugee status based ...
Who is the ‘queer refugee’? How do we manage their feelings, emotions and experiences when assessing...
European and Finnish national legislation and jurisprudence leave asylum decision-makerswith a wide ...
This article critically appraises Canadian Immigration and Refugee Board decision-making that impose...
Canada’s current definition of a refugee includes those facing persecution on account of sexual orie...
Canada offers refugee protection to sexual minorities facing persecution abroad. While success rates...
This article suggests that there are reasons to be concerned about the way relationship history impa...
Book Review: Real Queer? Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Refugees in the Canadian Refu...
Refugee and forced migration studies have focused primarily on the refugees’ countries of origin and...
Since the early 1990s Canada has become a primary destination for individuals who make refugee claim...
This article discusses refugee determination from an intersectional perspective to unpack the impact...
Most of the scholarship on queer and trans migrants focuses on the refugee experience post-migration...
Over the past decade, the Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) of Canada has granted asylum to severa...
This article draws upon psychological and sociological literature to explore the issues that arise i...
This article examines the use of country information in determining claims for refugee status based ...
This article examines the use of country information in determining claims for refugee status based ...
Who is the ‘queer refugee’? How do we manage their feelings, emotions and experiences when assessing...
European and Finnish national legislation and jurisprudence leave asylum decision-makerswith a wide ...