Applying intersectionality to gender discrimination in International refugee law: the case of women asylum seekers
Abstract
This article proposes intersectionality as a legal hermeneutic tool to
enhance International Refugee Law, providing a comprehensive framework for
analysing asylum claims and addressing the needs of particularly vulnerable refugee
groups. Gender-based discrimination is inherently intersectional, rarely occurring in
isolation but intersecting with other identity markers – such as nationality, ethnicity,
religion, age, and migratory status – to produce compounded and distinctive forms
of oppression. Traditional single-axis approaches often fail to capture these
overlapping harms, potentially leaving applicants without adequate protection. The
article posits that intersectionality is particularly crucial in assessing both the credibility of asylum claims and the seriousness of gender-based persecution. Using
women asylum seekers as a paradigmatic case, it analyses FGM-related caselaw
before the European Court of Human Rights and illustrates how intersectional
reasoning can strengthen both the theoretical and practical capacity of refugee law,
advancing substantive equality.
