The Immutable Refugees: Sexual Orientation in Canada (A.G.) v. Ward
NICOLE LAVIOLETTE
ABSTRACT
International refugee law has been structured so that claimants must
fit themselves into narrowly defined categories: the Canadian Immigration
Act requires that refugee claimants establish a well-founded fear
of persecution based on one of the enumerated grounds, namely race,
religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political
opinion. As sexual orientation is not enumerated, many lesbian and gay
asylum seekers have attempted to establish their claim on the basis
of "membership in a particular social group." The 1993 Supreme
Court decision in Canada (A.G.) v. Ward has clarified that sexual
orientation is a ground upon which a refugee claimant may claim membership
in a particular social group because it is an innate or unchangeable
characteristic. The decision in Ward, while a positive development,
inappropriately classifies sexual orientation as an immutable personal
characteristic. It suggests that lesbians and gay men are deserving
of international protection only because they cannot change the personal
attribute for which they are persecuted. Instead, refugee status should
be granted because lesbians and gay men have a common social identity
which is ascribed an inferior social and political status by their persecutors.
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Citation: (1997)
55(1) U.T. Fac. L. Rev. 1.
Copyright © 1997. University of Toronto Faculty of Law Review.
All rights reserved.