This article discusses the case of refugees who are LGBT, and the possible grounds for using LGBT status as a basis for prioritizing LGBT persons in refugee admissions. I argue that those states most willing and able to protect LGBT persons against a variety of (also) non-asylum-grounding injustices have strong moral reasons to admit and prioritize refugees with LGBT status over non-LGBT refugees in refugee admissions. These states – typically, Western liberal democracies – are uniquely positioned to provide effective protection for refugees who are LGBT, owing to the failures of other, also refugee receiving, states to do so. The case for prioritizing refugees with LGBT status is built upon two interrelated factors. First, on the specific ...
Sexuality-based refugee claims constitute an expanding area of legal practice and scholarship. This ...
In a time marked by dramatic global change, women and men persecuted because they are lesbian or gay...
In the last decade the number of countries aiming to resettle refugees increased and complementary p...
It is now widely accepted that lesbians, gay men and transgendered people may make refugee claims on...
This paper discusses a recent turn in the ethics of refugee resettlement which involves taking the i...
This article examines the recognition given to sexual minorities through United States asylum law. T...
Lesbian, gay, and bisexual people continue to face discrimination and persecution in their daily liv...
This article discusses some of the normative bases for the recent (2020) Norwegian policy prioritizi...
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights enshrines the right of all persons to seek and enjoy asylu...
Though most cases of persecution, such as race or religious affiliation, are accepted as cause for r...
More than 80 countries around the world have laws criminalizing sexual activity between consenting a...
The Refugee Convention, now adopted by 147 states, is the primary instrument governing refugee statu...
Working AbstractIn 1951, The United Nations Refugee Convention established asylum for those with a “...
The discussion surrounding LGBT+ asylum-seekers and refugees is becoming more prominent as advocacy ...
Sexuality-based refugee claims constitute an expanding area of legal practice and scholarship. This ...
Sexuality-based refugee claims constitute an expanding area of legal practice and scholarship. This ...
In a time marked by dramatic global change, women and men persecuted because they are lesbian or gay...
In the last decade the number of countries aiming to resettle refugees increased and complementary p...
It is now widely accepted that lesbians, gay men and transgendered people may make refugee claims on...
This paper discusses a recent turn in the ethics of refugee resettlement which involves taking the i...
This article examines the recognition given to sexual minorities through United States asylum law. T...
Lesbian, gay, and bisexual people continue to face discrimination and persecution in their daily liv...
This article discusses some of the normative bases for the recent (2020) Norwegian policy prioritizi...
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights enshrines the right of all persons to seek and enjoy asylu...
Though most cases of persecution, such as race or religious affiliation, are accepted as cause for r...
More than 80 countries around the world have laws criminalizing sexual activity between consenting a...
The Refugee Convention, now adopted by 147 states, is the primary instrument governing refugee statu...
Working AbstractIn 1951, The United Nations Refugee Convention established asylum for those with a “...
The discussion surrounding LGBT+ asylum-seekers and refugees is becoming more prominent as advocacy ...
Sexuality-based refugee claims constitute an expanding area of legal practice and scholarship. This ...
Sexuality-based refugee claims constitute an expanding area of legal practice and scholarship. This ...
In a time marked by dramatic global change, women and men persecuted because they are lesbian or gay...
In the last decade the number of countries aiming to resettle refugees increased and complementary p...