Greenberg, ‘The “Particular Social Group” Requirement’, 2017
- Category: Literature
- Source: Academic
- Subject: Sexual Orientation/Sexuality, Refugee/Asylum, Human Rights, LGBT+
- Place: Americas
- Year: 2017
- File: The Particular Social Group Requirement
- URL: https://digitalcommons.law.umaryland.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1283&context=rrgc
Reagan Greenberg, ‘The “Particular Social Group” Requirement: How the Asylum Process Is Consistently Failing LGB Applicants and How an Evidentiary Standard of “Self-Attestation” Can Remedy These Failures’, 2017 University of Maryland Law Journal of Race, Religion, Gender and Class 17 (1), pp 147- 172
Abstract
Every year, tens of thousands of individuals flee their home nation for the United States to seek asylum. In 2015 alone, 26,124 individuals were granted asylum to the United States. Asylum is requested and, for the lucky, granted for a variety of reasons. People seek asylum in the United States on the basis of their race, religion, nationality, relationship to certain social groups, political opinion, and more. This Comment focuses on those individuals who seek asylum because they have faced, or will face, persecution in their home country because of their sexual orientation.
Lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) asylum seekers face unique challenges throughout the process of seeking asylum. These challenges are pervasive within the field of immigration. Sexual orientation is not a characteristic that is readily observable, and because of the pervasive stigma experienced by LGB individuals in many countries, these asylum applicants do not have access to the evidence required to adequately prove their claims. This Comment argues that, in the absence of reasonably available evidence, an evidentiary standard of “self-attestation” for sexual orientation is sufficient for proving that an LGB asylum seeker is a member of a protected social group.