Journal Citation:
52(3) COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF TRANSNATIONAL LAW, 896-932 (2014)
This article compares the ways in which
forced marriage is perceived as
persecution under the domestic asylum laws
of in the United Kingdom, Spain, and
France. The article argues that forced
marriage should be uniformly recognized as
persecution in asylum law, and that the
lack of such systematic recognition across
UK, Spain and France leads to arbitrary
and inconsistent adjudication of asylum
claims by forced marriage victims, despite
attempts to make such laws uniform through
the Common European Asylum System (CEAS).
The article ultimately advocates for the
implementation of potential solutions to
ensure victims of forced marriage are
protected. These include an international
convention addressing qualification for
refugee status that recognizes gender
based persecution and links this
persecution to international human rights
standards,leading to implicit
acknowledgement of forced marriage as a
persecutory harm; a substantive regional
agreement between the UK, France, Spain
and the rest of the EU member nations that
addresses gender-based persecution and
recognizes forced marriage as a
persecutory harm; and the adoption of
national gender guidelines in France and
Spain that directly identify forced
marriage as a persecutory harm.