Un/Convention(Al) Refugees: Contextualizing the Accounts of Refugees Facing Homophobic Or Transphobic Persecution. Un/Convention(Al) Refugees: Contextualizing the Accounts of Refugees Facing Homophobic Or Transphobic Persecution.

Un/Convention(Al) Refugees: Contextualizing the Accounts of Refugees Facing Homophobic Or Transphobic Persecution‪.‬

Refuge 2009, Fall, 26, 2

    • 2,99 €
    • 2,99 €

Publisher Description

Abstract Propelled by fear of violence and flight from stigma, impelled by desire for connection and belonging, the movements of people whose sexualities or genders defy and offend norms cover a complex spatial, social, and psychological terrain. This paper presents partial findings of a critical qualitative inquiry conducted in partnership with Rainbow Refugee Committee, a community organization that supports and advocates with Queer, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans (LGBTQ) and HIV-positive refugee claimants/migrants. This inquiry into how queer refugees engage in settlement comprised participation in Rainbow Refugee Committee and narrative interviews with LGBTQ refugee claimants and refugees, as well as interviews with service providers, community organizers, and lawyers. This paper explores how pre-settlement experiences conditioned possibilities for safety and belonging through refugee protection. While seeking refugee protection, queer refugees are evaluated against expected narratives of refugee flight and of LGBT identity. This paper reflects on the unconventionality of queer refugees' accounts in relation to these expectations. Queer refugees settling in Canada recounted surviving persecution by dis/avowing their desires, distancing/taking on available identities, avoiding/seeking out others, and conforming/escaping. They pursued mixed, often precarious, migration trajectories constrained by tightening migration controls and the relative obscurity of refugee protection for sexual or gender-based persecution. In their hearings, they struggled with and against Western cultural narratives of sexual and gender identities, coming out, and gender dysphoria. Interview excerpts highlight relational agencies in claimants' engagements with the refugee system.

GENRE
Non-Fiction
RELEASED
2009
22 September
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
56
Pages
PUBLISHER
Centre for Refugee Studies
SIZE
268.5
KB

More Books by Refuge

"Citizens Without Borders"?: Discussions of Transnationalism and Forced Migrants at the Ninth Conference of the International Association for the Study of Forced Migration, Sao Paulo, Brazil, January 2005. "Citizens Without Borders"?: Discussions of Transnationalism and Forced Migrants at the Ninth Conference of the International Association for the Study of Forced Migration, Sao Paulo, Brazil, January 2005.
2006
The International Relations of the "New" Extraterritorial Approaches to Refugee Protection: Explaining the Policy Initiatives of the UK Government and Unhcr (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees) The International Relations of the "New" Extraterritorial Approaches to Refugee Protection: Explaining the Policy Initiatives of the UK Government and Unhcr (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees)
2004
Migration and Security: September 11 and Implications for Canada's Policies (Roundtable Report) (Panel Discussion) Migration and Security: September 11 and Implications for Canada's Policies (Roundtable Report) (Panel Discussion)
2002
Development and Conflict Prevention: Reflections on Rwanda: An Interview with Professor Peter Uvin (Interview) Development and Conflict Prevention: Reflections on Rwanda: An Interview with Professor Peter Uvin (Interview)
2002
Who Wants to Return Home? A Survey of Sudanese Refugees in Kakuma, Kenya (Survey) Who Wants to Return Home? A Survey of Sudanese Refugees in Kakuma, Kenya (Survey)
2008
Aspirations for Higher Education Among Newcomer Refugee Youth in Toronto: Expectations, Challenges, And Strategies. Aspirations for Higher Education Among Newcomer Refugee Youth in Toronto: Expectations, Challenges, And Strategies.
2010