Human Rights Law Review
Volume 18, Issue 2, 2018, Pages 347-370
The protection of women asylum seekers under the European Convention On Human Rights: Unearthing the gendered roots of harm (Article)
Peroni L.*
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a
Helena Kennedy Centre for International Justice, Sheffield Hallam University, United Kingdom, Human Rights Centre, Ghent University, Belgium
Abstract
In this article I analyse women asylum seekers' claims of gendered ill-treatment under Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights. I argue that the European Court of Human Rights moves away from creating equal conditions of protection for women asylum seekers every time it adopts two modes of reasoning: under scrutinizing the gendered roots of risk of ill-treatment and over scrutinizing individual capacity to deal with the risk. The first mode of reasoning overlooks the social and institutional conditions that render women vulnerable to ill-treatment. The second mode over emphasizes a woman's ability to protect herself and/or male relatives' capacity to protect her. The two modes suggest that women asylum seekers risk ill-treatment because of personal failures/limits rather than socio-institutional failures/constraints. These modes of reasoning may oversimplify concrete risks and recreate women's subordinate status in human rights discourse. To counter these faults, in this article I propose to reappraise the risk of gendered ill-treatment structurally and relationally. © The Author(s) [2018]. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85048580573&doi=10.1093%2fhrlr%2fngy005&partnerID=40&md5=3b19b157cbebebe8f10829a53c037368
DOI: 10.1093/hrlr/ngy005
ISSN: 14617781
Original Language: English