Sexual orientation and gender identity claims of asylum
Read about the Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Claims of Asylum research project.
About the project
(Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Claims of Asylum: A European Human Rights Challenge) is a four-year (2016-2020) research project funded by the European Research Council (ERC) exploring the social and legal experiences of individuals across Europe claiming international protection on the basis of their sexual orientation or gender identity (SOGI).
in the School of Law led the project, with a team of researchers including , and . The project’s outputs include several articles and a two-volume monograph to be published in 2021 by Springer.
Contributing to improvements in the field of SOGI asylum was an aim of the project from the outset – improvements at European level and within the project’s case study jurisdictions of Germany, Italy and the UK.
Some of the ways in which this has begun to be achieved include:
- Establishing a SOGICA on the – an online repository of SOGI asylum materials that is a resource for lawyers, activists and policy-makers. The database has more than 1,1,00 items and continues to be updated on a regular basis.
- The establishment of a SOGICA and also subscribers to the project’s – issued quarterly throughout the project to update subscribers about the project, but also about broader SOGI asylum developments in Europe and beyond.
- Submissions and recommendation to the EU to both improve measures relating to SOGI asylum (), and mainstream SOGI asylum concerns in broader LGBTQI+ agendas () and asylum agendas ().
- Targeted recommendations at domestic level for , and .
- A in September 2021 to highlight the recommendations and explore their implementation with officials and NGO representatives.
- in Germany, Italy and the UK to hold governments accountable for their records on SOGI asylum.
- Work in partnership with NGOs to inform policy and practice in Germany, Italy and the UK, including contributions to submissions to statutory inquiries and consultations, for example the in January 2020 and cited in ‘‘, 48th Report of Session 2017–19, House of Lords, European Union Committee, UK Parliament, 11 October 2019.
- throughout the project to highlight SOGI asylum concerns in each of the countries analysed.
- A including a , as well as , and country case study videos that feature some of our participants, and to raise awareness of SOGI asylum.
- A that brought together 600 academics, policy makers, activists, lawyers and anyone with an interest in this field to share experiences and network.
- Contributions to workshops and seminars to improve policy and practice, for example, the project team took part in European Asylum Support Office thematic webinars to increase protection standards for SOGI asylum claimants (November 2020 and February 2021).
- Membership of the Vulnerability Working Group in charge of developing the '' published by the (EUAA), 2024.
- Journal article ‘’, Refugee Survey Quarterly 40(3), 315–347 (co-authored by Moira Dustin and Nuno Ferreira) cited by the Canadian Federal Court in (Citizenship and Immigration), 2023 FC 956.
- Participation in follow-up meeting of the ‘2021 Global Roundtable on Protection and Solutions for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Intersex, Queer (LGBTIQ+) Persons in Forced Displacement’, organised by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and the UN Independent Expert on Protection Against Violence and Discrimination Based on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (UN IE SOGI) (by invitation), Geneva, Switzerland (UNHCR report ).
- to the UK Parliament’s Justice and Home Affairs Committee’s ‘’ inquiry, 12 September 2022 - report with references to SOGICA contribution available in UK House of Lords Justice and Home Affairs Committee, ‘’, 2023.
- to ‘’ inquiry, Women and Equalities Committee, 23 February 2022 - report with references to and oral evidence available
- cited in ‘‘, 48th Report of Session 2017–19, House of Lords, European Union Committee, UK Parliament, 11 October 2019.
While much of the project’s scholarship is now complete, the application of the research findings to promote a more just SOGI asylum experience will continue.