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Gender and Asylum in International Law — The Geneva Convention Revisited

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Gendering the International Asylum and Refugee Debate
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Abstract

The system of international laws and conventions which offer protection to asylum seekers and refugees supposedly offers protection to all on a gender-neutral basis. Many critics, however, have pointed to the fact that these laws and conventions were drafted on the basis of the situation of male refugees, and that moreover, their application is often undermined by deeply gendered practices which fail to offer protection to women because their persecution is not recognised as such. These interpretations of refugee law through the bias of the experiences of male refugees and asylum applicants and their activities has both reflected and reinforced existing gender biases within states. The continuing gendered division of labour within most societies, as well as an underlying assumption of a “public-private” division, undermines the gender neutrality of refugee law and practice by creating situations in which women’s experience of political activity or of persecution is not seen as relevant to the law. This means that issues such as the threat of forced marriage, or of female genital mutilation (FGM), for example, are often not considered seriously as grounds for granting of asylum, or may be assigned to “cultural differences” which are part of the order of things.

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© 2007 Jane Freedman

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Freedman, J. (2007). Gender and Asylum in International Law — The Geneva Convention Revisited. In: Gendering the International Asylum and Refugee Debate. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230592544_4

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