Experiences of Violence Among Female West African Asylum Seekers in Atlanta: a Qualitative Analysis

Background: As the world faces the greatest number of displaced persons in history, it is urgent for countries offering refuge and asylum to understand the needs of these vulnerable populations. Asylum seekers face great uncertainty in the US legal system, and female asylum seekers often face additi...

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Main Authors: Kathleen Curtis, Dabney Evans
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Georgia Southern University 2019-10-01
Series:Journal of the Georgia Public Health Association
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/jgpha/vol7/iss2/9
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author Kathleen Curtis
Dabney Evans
author_facet Kathleen Curtis
Dabney Evans
author_sort Kathleen Curtis
collection DOAJ
description Background: As the world faces the greatest number of displaced persons in history, it is urgent for countries offering refuge and asylum to understand the needs of these vulnerable populations. Asylum seekers face great uncertainty in the US legal system, and female asylum seekers often face additional challenges. The Atlanta Asylum Network (AAN) facilitates access to low or no-cost physical, psychological and gynecological evaluations to enable a fair and complete judicial process. The purpose of this analysis is to assess the presence of various types of violence experienced by a population of female West African asylum seekers, and to make recommendations of how asylum policies can be applied more fairly. Methods: Qualitative analysis was conducted on 15 narrative affidavits from female West African clients of the AAN. These affidavits serve as a legal record of the persecution the asylum seeker faced in their home country. Based in grounded theory, the analysis consisted of data memoing, coding, and the development of thick descriptions. The analysis outcomes were reviewed to ensure they were grounded in the data, with special attention paid to outliers. Results: The key themes that emerged throughout analysis centered on experiences of structural violence and interpersonal violence, as well as significant examples of interaction between the two types. There were also clear differences between the experiences of two deductive subgroups: Gender-based and Gender-biased. Conclusions: In the US asylum process, cases of structural violence tend to be favored over cases of interpersonal violence. However, actual experiences show this is often a false dichotomy. For example, interpersonal violence can become structural when the government fails to protect the victim or punish the perpetrator. Asylum seekers should emphasize experiences of intersectional violence, and asylum law should be more consistently applied through acknowledgement of this complexity and codification in legal guidelines. Keywords: Asylum, refugee, violence against women, human rights, West Africa, health, Atlanta, qualitative, gender based violence
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spelling doaj.art-ed3c45c0eb224d878ae698765dd0dd6e2022-12-21T19:10:21ZengGeorgia Southern UniversityJournal of the Georgia Public Health Association2471-97732019-10-017210.20429/jgpha.2019.070209Experiences of Violence Among Female West African Asylum Seekers in Atlanta: a Qualitative AnalysisKathleen CurtisDabney EvansBackground: As the world faces the greatest number of displaced persons in history, it is urgent for countries offering refuge and asylum to understand the needs of these vulnerable populations. Asylum seekers face great uncertainty in the US legal system, and female asylum seekers often face additional challenges. The Atlanta Asylum Network (AAN) facilitates access to low or no-cost physical, psychological and gynecological evaluations to enable a fair and complete judicial process. The purpose of this analysis is to assess the presence of various types of violence experienced by a population of female West African asylum seekers, and to make recommendations of how asylum policies can be applied more fairly. Methods: Qualitative analysis was conducted on 15 narrative affidavits from female West African clients of the AAN. These affidavits serve as a legal record of the persecution the asylum seeker faced in their home country. Based in grounded theory, the analysis consisted of data memoing, coding, and the development of thick descriptions. The analysis outcomes were reviewed to ensure they were grounded in the data, with special attention paid to outliers. Results: The key themes that emerged throughout analysis centered on experiences of structural violence and interpersonal violence, as well as significant examples of interaction between the two types. There were also clear differences between the experiences of two deductive subgroups: Gender-based and Gender-biased. Conclusions: In the US asylum process, cases of structural violence tend to be favored over cases of interpersonal violence. However, actual experiences show this is often a false dichotomy. For example, interpersonal violence can become structural when the government fails to protect the victim or punish the perpetrator. Asylum seekers should emphasize experiences of intersectional violence, and asylum law should be more consistently applied through acknowledgement of this complexity and codification in legal guidelines. Keywords: Asylum, refugee, violence against women, human rights, West Africa, health, Atlanta, qualitative, gender based violencehttps://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/jgpha/vol7/iss2/9asylumrefugeeviolence against womenhuman rightswest africahealthatlantaqualitativegender based violence
spellingShingle Kathleen Curtis
Dabney Evans
Experiences of Violence Among Female West African Asylum Seekers in Atlanta: a Qualitative Analysis
Journal of the Georgia Public Health Association
asylum
refugee
violence against women
human rights
west africa
health
atlanta
qualitative
gender based violence
title Experiences of Violence Among Female West African Asylum Seekers in Atlanta: a Qualitative Analysis
title_full Experiences of Violence Among Female West African Asylum Seekers in Atlanta: a Qualitative Analysis
title_fullStr Experiences of Violence Among Female West African Asylum Seekers in Atlanta: a Qualitative Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Experiences of Violence Among Female West African Asylum Seekers in Atlanta: a Qualitative Analysis
title_short Experiences of Violence Among Female West African Asylum Seekers in Atlanta: a Qualitative Analysis
title_sort experiences of violence among female west african asylum seekers in atlanta a qualitative analysis
topic asylum
refugee
violence against women
human rights
west africa
health
atlanta
qualitative
gender based violence
url https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/jgpha/vol7/iss2/9
work_keys_str_mv AT kathleencurtis experiencesofviolenceamongfemalewestafricanasylumseekersinatlantaaqualitativeanalysis
AT dabneyevans experiencesofviolenceamongfemalewestafricanasylumseekersinatlantaaqualitativeanalysis