Millennium Development Goals and the Protection of Displaced and Refugee Women and Girls
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Scope and Consequences of Forced Displacement
3. Implications of the MDGs for Displaced/Refugee Women and Girls
3.1. Refugee Women Seeking Local Integration in Host Countries
3.2. Refugee Women Seeking Resettlement and Access to Fair Asylum Procedures
3.2.1. Procedural Challenges
3.2.2. Legal Challenges
4. Conclusions and Proposal to Expand the MDGs to Include State Responsibility towards Refugees and the Forcibly Displaced, Particularly Women and Girls
Gender inequality persists and women continue to face discrimination in access to education, work and economic assets, and participation in government…Violence against women continues to undermine efforts to reach all goals…Poverty is a major barrier to secondary education, especially among older girls…Women are largely relegated to more vulnerable forms of employment [156]…
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References and Notes
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- “Children working in domestic services, usually girls or children working and/or living on the street (‘street children’), may be particularly at risk of sexual abuse and exploitation.” See, ([51], p. 73).
- The Women’s Commission notes that “[d]isplaced girls also work as domestic workers in urban centers, in refugee camps and in neighboring host communities. Children in such circumstances are vulnerable to mistreatment, including the withholding of payment and physical and sexual abuse” ([52], p. 16). The report also cites an interview with a 15-year-old Congolese girl in Tongagara camp, Zimbabwe, describing her employer’s demands for sex: “[h]e told me if I wanted a scholarship [for secondary school], I had to be his girlfriend. I had to have sex with him. Other girls did it. They wanted to go to school. I refused and didn’t get my scholarship” ([52], p. 9).
- See ([51], p. 40). UNHCR notes the prevalence of female refugees who become separated from their husbands and male family members and the non-traditional role that women must assume.
- See Maja Korac. “War, Flight, and Exile: Gendered Violence Among Refugee Women from Post Yugoslav States.” In Sites of Violence: Gender and Conflict Zones. Edited by Wenona Giles and Jennifer Hyndman. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2004, pp. 249–72. Available online: http://roar.uel.ac.uk/jspui/bitstream/10552/669/1/Korac%2c%20M%20%282004%29%20Sites%20of%20Violence%20pp%20249-72.pdf (accessed on 24 August 2012). (Korac provides a refugee woman’s description of feeling incompetent and helpless while trying to raise her children alone).
- See also ([50], p. 11). UNHCR describes the additional plight of girls who become caregivers for parents who cannot speak the new language.
- UN Dept. of Public Information. “Goal 2: Achieve Universal Primary Education.” 2010. Available online: http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/pdf/MDG_FS_2_EN.pdf (accessed on 16 August 2012). The article indicates that in developing regions there are 96 girls for every 100 boys enrolled in primary education and 95 girls for every 100 boys in secondary education, but still only an average of 67-76 girls for every 100 boys enrolled in tertiary education.
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- Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada. “Guidelines Issued by the Chairperson Pursuant to Section 65(3) of the Immigration Act: Women Refugee Claimants Fearing Gender-Related Persecution.” 13 March 1996. Available online: http://www.irb-cisr.gc.ca/Eng/BoaCom/references/pol/GuiDir/Pages/GuideDir04.aspx (accessed on 28 August 2013).
- The Asylum and Human Rights program at Boston University School of Law is not unique in representing women asylum-seekers who, after being required to give details of their experiences to the court, have then been rejected and sometimes abandoned by their spouses.
- UNHCR. “Procedural Standards for Refugee Status Determination under UNHCR’s Mandate.” 2003. Available online: http://www.unhcr.org/4317223c9.pdf (accessed on 23 August 2012). UNHCR establishes the standards for registering and processing refugee status determination claims, which highlight the importance of status as a ‘principal applicant.’.
- “Women and girls may be viewed as dependants without rights or claims in their own right.” ([50], p. 17).
- UNHCR notes that women and girls “can often represent the best way to ensure assistance reaches the whole family.” ([50], p. 17).
- See Shoafera v. INS, 228 F.3d 1070, 1079 (9th Cir. 2000). The 9th Circuit reverses the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) and the immigration judge’s (IJ) decisions that had found that the applicant was raped not because of her ethnicity, but because her rapist was “a man who believed he had the authority and impunity to carry out sexual depravities.”
- Gomez v. INS, 947 F.2d 660, 664 (2d Cir. 1991). The 2nd Circuit holds that beatings and rapes of applicant when she was between 12 and 14 years old were not considered persecution ‘on account of’ social group membership.
- Campos-Guardado v. INS, 809 F.2d 285, 290 (5th Cir. 1987). The 5th Circuit finds petitioner ineligible for asylum: the rapes she suffered were not persecution because they were not ‘on account of’ her political opinion or membership in a particular social group.
- But see a minority line of cases beginning with In re D- V-, 21 I. & N. Dec. 77 (BIA 1993), where the BIA found that a female applicant was raped ‘on account of’ her political opinion and held that persecution occurred.
- UNHCR’s 1991 Guidelines on Refugee Women summarized the state of the law at the time: “[V]ictims of rape by military forces face difficulties in obtaining refugee status when the adjudicators of their refugee claim view such attacks as a ‘normal’ part of warfare.” UNHCR. Guidelines on the Protection of Refugee Women. Geneva: UNHCR, 1991, Available online: http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/docid/3ae6b3310.html (accessed on 5 August 2012).
- See also Heaven Crawley, and Trine Lester. Comparative Analysis of Gender-Related Persecution in National Asylum Legislation and Practice in Europe. Geneva: UNHCR Evaluation and Policy Analysis Unit, 2004, Available online: http://www.jrseurope.org/accompanydetainees/docs/Crawley%20Report%20on%20EU%20Gender%20and%20Asylum.pdf (accessed on 5 August 2012).
- Refugee Women’s Resource Project. “Leave Granted to Woman Who Lost at Every Appeal Stage.” Women’s Asylum News. May 2003, pp. 1–2. Available online: http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/pdfid/47b17597d.pdf (accessed on 21 June 2013). The article discusses a UK Court of Appeal decision to deny Convention protection from persecution to a Ugandan woman who was repeatedly raped on account of her son’s political affiliations.
- Karen Musalo. “Protecting Victims of Gendered Persecution: Fear of Floodgates or Call to (Principled) Action? ” Virginia Journal of Social Policy & Law 14 (2007): 119–58. [Google Scholar] Musalo notes that under Guatemalan law, “[s]pousal rape is also not recognized as a crime, and a man who rapes a woman who is not his wife is released from criminal culpability if he marries his victim as long as she is twelve years of age or older.”
- See In re A- T-, 24 I. & N. Dec. 296, 301 (BIA 2007) (The case demonstrates the position, before it was overruled, of the BIA’s refusal to recognize FGM as persecution.), vacated, In re A- T-, 24 I. & N. Dec. 617 (BIA 2008).
- More recently, there has been slow progress in the U.S. in recognizing FGM as a basis for future persecution. See, e.g., Bah v. Mukasey, 529 F.3d 99, 112 (2d Cir. 2008). The 2nd Circuit reasons that FGM can be a source of ongoing fear of persecution and, as such, can be grounds for asylum.
- Crawley states Swedish law that “cases based on a fear of FGM cannot result in refugee status.” ([101], p. 58).
- Stefan Ericsson. “Working Paper of the Directorate-General for Research of the European Parliament on Asylum in the EU Member States.” LIBE 108 EN, 2000, 92. Available online: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/workingpapers/libe/pdf/108_en.pdf (accessed on 26 August 2012). Ericsson explains that Greece has begun to take FGM into account during decision-making, but this type of gender-related persecution has rarely been sufficient to afford protection.
- Rodger PG Haines. “Gender-Based Persecution: New Zealand Jurisprudence.” February 1996. 30. Available online: http://www.refugee.org.nz/Gennz.htm#THE%20NEW%20ZEALAND%20REFUGEE%20DETERMINATION%20PROCESS (accessed on 26 August 2012). Haines states that “some Western countries, especially Germany, Sweden and France, []restrict[] the application of the concept of agents of persecution to the extent that refugee status is only granted to victims of persecution by state authorities or by other actors encouraged or tolerated by the state.”.
- See Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v. Khawar, (2002) 76 A.L.J.R. 667, 120 (Austral.) (The court states that the husband and his family member’s motivation for abusing and threatening the petitioner was not related to her membership in a gender-specific social group.).
- Crawley describes a Swedish case where “a Bangladeshi woman whose account of gang rape by political opponents was considered credible but not to be for a Convention reason or sufficiently serious to warrant the granting of refugee status…. [N]o woman who had suffered rape at the hands of non-State agents was granted refugee status.”). ([101], p. 38).
- Karen Musalo. “Revisiting Social Group and Nexus in Gender Asylum Claims: A Unifying Rationale for Evolving Jurisprudence.” DePaul Law Review 52 (2003): 777. [Google Scholar] Musalo analyzes the progression from the routine failure of many courts to recognize a range of different types of individual abuse of women as grounds for asylum to multiple international courts accepting their validity for asylum claims.
- See UNHCR. “Guidelines on International Protection: Gender-Related Persecution within the Context of Article 1A(2) of the 1951 Convention and/or its 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees.” 7 May 2002. HCR/GIP/02/01, 7. Available online: http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/docid/3d36f1c64.html (accessed on 10 August 2012).
- US Citizenship and Immigration Services, Asylum Division. “Asylum Officer Basic Training: Female Asylum Applicants and Gender-Related Claims.” 12 March 2009. Available online: http://www.uscis.gov/USCIS/Humanitarian/Refugees%20&%20Asylum/Asylum/AOBTC%20Lesson%20Plans/Female-Asylum-Applicants-Gender-Related-Claims-31aug10.pdf (accessed on 16 August 2012). [Google Scholar]
- See also Leah Bassel. “Citizenship as Interpellation: Refugee Women and the State, Government and Opposition.” Government and Opposition 43 (2008): 2. Available online: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1477-7053.2007.00247.x/full (accessed on 25 July 2012). [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- See Executive Committee of the High Commissioner's Programme, UN High Commissioner for Refugees. “Refugee Women and International Protection.” 18 October 1985. No. 39. Available online: http://www.refworld.org/docid/3ae68c43a8.html (accessed on 21 June 2013). Noting that “women asylum-seekers who face harsh or inhuman treatment due to having transgressed the social mores of the society in which they live may be considered as a “particular social group” within the meaning of Article 1 A(2) of the 1951 United Nations Refugee Convention.
- Considerations for Asylum Officers Adjudicating Asylum Claims from Women. Memorandum from Phyllis Coven, Office of International Affairs, US INS, to All INS Asylum Officers, 1995.
- UNHCR acknowledges that “the grounds for establishing refugee status do not include gender.” ([112], p. 16).
- Despite the progress in granting gender-related claims for asylum in many countries, the U.S., along with other countries, does not recognize ‘gender’ alone as a Convention ground. Gender, in addition to other factors, can be the basis for an asylum claim. See, e.g., In re Kasinga, 21 I. & N. Dec. 357, 358 (BIA 1996). (The court found that young women of the Tchamba-Kunsuntu Tribe who have not had FGM as practiced by the tribe and who oppose the practice can constitute a particular social group.).
- See also ([107], p. 107). Ericsson notes that Italy lacks specific provisions related to female refugees, and that courts have occasionally recognized persecution on membership of a social group, but only when women “have transgressed strict religious or social rules.”
- See also ([101], pp. 47, 85). Crawley states that under both Dutch and Swedish law, a social group cannot be defined by gender.
- See “Summary Conclusions: Gender-Related Persecution.” Expert Roundtable Organized by the UNHCR and the International Institute of Humanitarian Law, San Remo, Italy, 6–8 September 2001. Para. 4. “The main problem facing women asylum seekers is the failure of decision makers to… recognize the political nature of seemingly private acts of harm to women.”
- See Carol Bohmer, and Amy Shuman. “Gender & Political Asylum.” Foreign Policy Association. 13 April 2011. Available online: http://foreignpolicyblogs.com/2011/04/13/gender-political-asylum/ (accessed on 23 July 2012). Bohmer notes that while political asylum is conceptually gender-neutral, men and women’s claims are not evaluated equally in practice; the “evaluation of women’s political action is sometimes regarded as either not political enough or as belonging to such a general category that granting political asylum would ‘open the floodgates’ to too many individuals.”
- See Eithne Luibheid. Entry Denied: Controlling Sexuality at the Border. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2002. [Google Scholar] “[R]ealms of experience that usually belonged to women—including experiences of rape—were foreclosed from consideration…as possible grounds for asylum,” or as evidence of persecution.
- See Heaven Crawley. “Gender, Persecution and the Concept of Politics in the Asylum Determination Process.” Forced Migration Review 9 (2000): 17–18. Available online: http://www.fmreview.org/sites/fmr/files/FMRdownloads/en/FMRpdfs/FMR09/fmr9full.pdf (accessed on 2 August 2012). [Google Scholar] Crawley notes “that the extent of women’s political participation has been underestimated…indicat[ing] a tendency to misrepresent gendered forms of persecution and resistance as personal rather than political.”
- See Emily Love. “Equality in Political Asylum Law: For a Legislative Recognition of Gender-Based Persecution.” Harvard Women's Law Journal 17 (1994): 139. [Google Scholar] Love highlights that under the definition of refugee, political opinion is viewed as a public sphere activity, invariably shifting the focus of political asylum claims away from women whose activities are typically domestic.
- Compare the successful claims of male asylum seekers claiming persecution on account of political opinion: Navas v. INS, 217 F.3d 646, 661 (9th Cir. 2000), Ratnam v. INS, 154 F.3d 990, 996 (9th Cir. 1998), and Haider v. Holder, 595 F.3d 276, 285 (6th Cir. 2010), with similar claims by female asylum seekers who ultimately failed: Klawitter v. INS, 970 F.2d 149, 152 (6th Cir. 1992), Campos-Guardado, 809 F.2d at 290, and In re Konesan, A29 637 308, slip op. (BIA June 11, 1992).
- See also Refugee Appeal No. 2039/93 Re MN (12 February 1996) at 50 (N.Z.) (“An approach to refugee determination which unjustifiably favours the political opinion ground to the exclusion of the social group ground will tend to reinforce the male gender bias often complained of by female asylum-seekers, and inhibit the development of a refugee jurisprudence which properly recognises and accommodates gender issues within the legitimate bounds of the Refugee Convention.”).
- See also ([101], p. 70). Crawley provides two examples of adjudicatory failure to acknowledge women’s political activities as significant.
- See also ([107], p. 82). Ericsson describes that Germany rarely considers gender-related persecution as political.
- UNHCR highlights the difficulties for women making claims based on political opinion in domestic courts. “The image of a political refugee as someone who is fleeing persecution for his or her direct involvement in political activity does not always correspond to the reality of the experiences of women… Women are less likely than their male counterparts to engage in high profile political activity…” ([112], p. 9).
- See Refugee Appeal No. 3/91 Re ZWD (20 October 1992) (The court states New Zealand’s generally accepted practice that although ‘one child’ policies, forced sterilization and forced abortion are not per se within protected Convention grounds, there may be situations where a sufficient political opinion will qualify the case as persecution.).
- Crawley notes that German law tends to focus on political persecution, and cases involving FGM and noncompliance with religious dress codes are generally considered under this Convention ground. ([101], p. 87).
- Women’s Refugee Resource Project. Women Asylum Seekers in the UK: A Gender Perspective, Some Facts and Figures. London: Asylum Aid, 2003, pp. 112–13. Available online: http://www.asylumaid.org.uk/data/files/publications/29/Women%20asylum%20seekers%20in%20the%20UK%20a%20gender%20perspective.pdf (accessed on 2 August 2012). “[D]ress codes may violate a woman’s right to freedom of conscience, expression or religion...”
- UNHCR describes the way in which non-conformity to religious gender norms by a woman can lead to her persecution, even when she remains an adherent of the same religion as the perpetrator of the persecution. ([112], p. 6).
- But these cases do not fare well in the U.S. and several other states’ courts. See, e.g., Fatin v. INS, 12 F.3d 1233 (3d Cir. 1993).
- See Fisher v. INS, 79 F.3d 955 (9th Cir. 1996).
- See ([101], p. 45), discussing Finnish law.
- It has proved especially difficult for women and girls from the Arab and Muslim world to succeed in asylum claims with particular social group arguments. Most courts have interpreted these claims as assertions that the Islamic religion is the source of persecution—that is, that all women fleeing the Muslim world are refugees because Islam itself persecutes women. Although there has been slow progress here too, claims of Muslim women fleeing Muslim countries remain unlikely to succeed on the grounds of particular social group. See Susan M. Akram. “Orientalism Revisited in Asylum and Refugee Claims.” Intl. Jour. Refugee Law 12 (2000): 7, 19. See also Refugee Appeal No. 71427/99, 2000 NZAR 545 at 74 (N.Z.). Available online: http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/docid/3ae6b7400.html (accessed on 21 June 2013) (“The 1979 Iranian Constitution does not expressly relegate women to second-class status… However, the cumulative effect of the laws of Iran and of the so-called Islamic form of governance certainly produces that result.”).
- “The cultural relativity argument has the potential of confusing decision-makers in countries of asylum as to the appropriate standard by which human rights infringements in the country of origin are to be judged.” ([108], p. 37).
- Safaie v. INS, 25 F.3d 636 (8th Cir. 1994) superseded by statute as stated in Ngengwe v. Mukasey, 543 F.3d 1029, 1034 (8th Cir. 2008).
- Ngengwe illustrates “that gender asylum is alive and well in the current decade and continues to improve.” T.S. Twibell. “The Development of Gender as a Basis for Asylum in United States Immigration Law and Under the United Nations Refugee Convention: Case Studies of Female Asylum Seekers from Cameroon, Eritrea, Iraq and Somalia.” Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 24 (2010): 189. The decision also aids U.S. asylum seekers by countering the stereotype that refugees seek to abuse the system or threaten national security ([141], p. 308).
- However, establishing a social group’s existence is not a per se finding of a nexus relationship between the social group and the persecutor’s motive. K. T. Seelinger. “Forced Marriage and Asylum: Perceiving the Invisible Harm.” Columbia Human Rights Law Review 42 (2010): 102. Available online: http://www3.law.columbia.edu/hrlr/hrlr_journal/42.1/Seelinger.pdf (accessed on 18 August 2012). [Google Scholar]
- INS v. Elias-Zacarias, 502 U.S. 478 (1992).
- The Supreme Court interpreted the nexus requirement to mean that the victim must prove the intent of the persecutor, and that intent must be a Convention ground. This case concerned the motivation of Guatemalan guerrillas in threatening a young male applicant. ([143], pp. 483–84).
- UNHCR implicitly criticized the U.S.’ restrictive interpretation of the nexus requirement of Elias-Zacarias and the REAL ID Act in its 2002 Gender Guidelines. “The Convention ground must be a relevant contributing factor, though it need not be shown to be the sole, or dominant, cause… Attribution of the Convention ground to the claimant by the State or non-State actor of persecution is sufficient to establish the required causal connection.” ([112], p. 6).
- See also Joan Fitzpatrick. “The International Dimension of U.S. Refugee Law.” Berkeley Journal International Law 15 (1997): 12–24. [Google Scholar] (Fitzpatrick discusses the Elias-Zacarias decision and its connection with UNHCR guidelines for U.S. refugee law.).
- U.S. courts’ application of the Elias-Zacarias nexus requirement has created a difficult obstacle for refugee rape victims to overcome. See Menendez-Donis v. Ashcroft, 360 F.3d 915, 917 (8th Cir. 2004).
- See Quirino v. INS, 254 F.3d 859, 863 (9th Cir. 2001).
- See Molina-Morales v. INS, 237 F.3d 1048 (9th Cir. 2001).
- See Basova v. INS, INS No. A73 736 650 (10th Cir. July 14, 1999) (unpublished disposition). Available online: http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?navby=search&case=/data2/circs/10th/989540.html (accessed on 21 June 2013).
- However, even before the Court decided Elias-Zacarias, lower courts were cognizant of female refugee’s plight in making an asylum claim based on rape as persecution. See, e.g., Bolanos-Hernandez v. INS, 767 F.2d 1277, 1285 (9th Cir. 1984) (“Persecutors are hardly likely to provide their victims with affidavits attesting to their acts of persecution.”).
- See In re D-V-, 21 I. & N. Dec. at 77 (The initial denial by both the IJ and the BIA was based on the BIA’s position that the female applicant could not satisfy the nexus requirement as interpreted by the Supreme Court in Elias-Zacarias.).
- See also Campos-Guardado, 809 F.2d at 289.
- See also Melgar de Torres v. Reno, 191 F.3d 307, 313 (2d Cir. 1999).
- UN. “Goal 1: Eradicate Extreme Poverty & Hunger.” Available online: http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/poverty.shtml (accessed on 20 June 2013).
- UN. “Goal 13: Promote Gender Equality and Empower Women.” Available online: http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/gender.shtml (accessed on 20 June 2013).
- The World Bank. “Twenty Fragile States Make Progress on Millennium Development Goals.” 1 May 2013. Available online: http://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2013/05/01/twenty-fragile-states-make-progress-on-millennium-development-goals (accessed on 20 May 2013).
- Women Watch. “Facts & Figures: Rural Women and the Millennium Development Goals.” Available online: http://www.un.org/womenwatch/feature/ruralwomen/facts-figures.html (accessed on 21 May 2013).
- See, e.g., United Nations Development Group. “The Global Conversation Begins: Emerging Views for a New Development Agenda.” 2013. Available online: http://www.worldwewant2015.org/the-global-conversation-begins (accessed on 28 August 2013).
- See also UN System Task Team on the Post-2015 UN Development Agenda. “A Renewed Global Partnership for Development.” New York, March 2013. Available online: http://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/content/documents/833glob_dev_rep_2013.pdf (accessed on 28 August 2013).
- Global Thematic Consultation on Population Dynamics. “Population Dynamics in the Post-2015 Development Agenda.” 25 April 2013. Available online: http://www.iom.int/files/live/sites/iom/files/What-We-Do/docs/Outcome-Report-Pop-dynamic-and-post-2015-dev-agenda-14-March-2013.pdf (accessed on 28 August 2013).
- Kathleen Newland. “Concept Paper for the High-Level Panel Expert Policy Dialogue on Migration in the Post-2015 Development Agenda.” 18 February 2013. Available online: http://blogg.ud.se/utvecklingspolitik/files/2013/03/Concept-paper-for-the-high-level-panel-expert-policy-dialogue-on-migration.pdf (accessed on 28 August 2013).
- See ([162], p. 5) “It seems unlikely that one among the very small number of post-2015 development goals will be entirely devoted to migration.”
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Akram, S.M. Millennium Development Goals and the Protection of Displaced and Refugee Women and Girls. Laws 2013, 2, 283-313. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws2030283
Akram SM. Millennium Development Goals and the Protection of Displaced and Refugee Women and Girls. Laws. 2013; 2(3):283-313. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws2030283
Chicago/Turabian StyleAkram, Susan M. 2013. "Millennium Development Goals and the Protection of Displaced and Refugee Women and Girls" Laws 2, no. 3: 283-313. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws2030283
APA StyleAkram, S. M. (2013). Millennium Development Goals and the Protection of Displaced and Refugee Women and Girls. Laws, 2(3), 283-313. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws2030283