site advertisement

New Allergy Advice Platform Bridges Rural Care Gap

Too Religious To Be Queer? Faith And LGBTIQ+ Asylum In UK

The sociologist analysed the experience of 51 LGBTIQ+ religious people seeking asylum in the UK to challenge the assumption that religion and queerness are incompatible, and the results were published in the journal Ethnic and Racial Studies

The study offers a new perspective on how religion shapes the experiences of LGBTIQ+ people seeking asylum and highlights how the British Home Office often relies on secular ideas of queerness that fail to recognise the legitimacy of identities rooted in both faith, gender and sexuality.

In the UK, while the sexual orientation of claimants is recorded, gender identity is not. Home Office data reveals that claims based on persecution related to sexual orientation as lesbian, gay, or bisexual accounted for two per cent (1,377) of all asylum claims in 2023. Unlike other people seeking asylum, these individuals face unique challenges due to, among other factors, intersectional stigma, limited support networks, fears of being outed leading to mental health challenges, and housing and detention risks. Given the unique challenges faced by this population, it is critical to examine their lived experiences.

Isaac, a 40-year-old West African Catholic gay man, described his attempt to explain his overlapping identities during an interview with asylum officers. He revealed the scepticism from the interviewer.

Powerful statements like Isaac’s highlight the real-life implications of institutional bias and the need for asylum officers to be trained on cultural, gender and sexual diversity to recognise the co-existence of faith and queerness.

Dr Garcia Rodriguez explains that while having a religious faith is not automatically a barrier to a successful asylum claim, many LGBTIQ+ applicants reported being questioned by Home Office officials about whether they had renounced or struggled with their faith, reflecting scepticism about the possibility of being both religious and LGBTIQ+.

This scrutiny inevitably makes some asylum seekers feel marginalised, invalidating their gender, sexuality and religious identities. They feel they are not “LGBTIQ+ enough” for the Home Office when expressing a religious identity, while also not being “authentically religious” for faith communities because of their gender and sexuality. This has led to some applicants experiencing depression, anxiety and trauma.

Dr Garcia Rodriguez advocates for alternative assessment practices that genuinely account for and respect the diverse lived experiences of LGBTIQ+ individuals. Such approaches must move beyond rigid ‘homosecularist’ expectations and instead prioritise empathetic, personalised and contextually sensitive engagements that fully acknowledge the complex and fluid ways in which religious belief and queer identities coexist.

The full paper can be found here.

This research shows the urgent need for training that moves beyond Western-centric, normative and secular assumptions about queer identities in the UK. Asylum officers must be equipped to recognise the diverse and coexisting realities of faith and queerness among people seeking asylum, rather than treating them as contradictions.”
https://www.nottingham.ac.uk/news/too-religious-to-be-queer-faith-and-lgbtiq-asylum-in-the-uk

View Original | AusPol.co Disclaimer

Have Your Say

We acknowledge and pay our respects to the Traditional Owners of country throughout Australia


Disclaimer | Contact Us | AusPol Forum
All rights are owned by their respective owners
Terms & Conditions of Use