Fault Lines of Refugee Exclusion: Statelessness, Gender, and COVID-19 in South Asia

Despite widespread recognition of the right to a nationality, statelessness and its attendant vulnerabilities continue to characterize the lives of millions in South Asia. During the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, when states turned inward to protect their own citizens, refugees and de facto statel...

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Main Authors: Roshni Chakraborty, Jacqueline Bhabha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Harvard FXB Center for Health and Human Rights 2020-06-01
Series:Health and Human Rights
Online Access:https://cdn1.sph.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/2469/2021/06/Chakraborty.pdf
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spelling doaj-c6b6cd21ba934116b3a0b7e19d60faad2021-06-25T19:46:02ZengHarvard FXB Center for Health and Human RightsHealth and Human Rights2150-41132150-41132020-06-01231237250Fault Lines of Refugee Exclusion: Statelessness, Gender, and COVID-19 in South AsiaRoshni Chakraborty0Jacqueline BhabhaUndergraduate student in the Committee on Degrees in Social Studies and the Department of Global Health and Health Policy at Harvard College, Cambridge, USA.Despite widespread recognition of the right to a nationality, statelessness and its attendant vulnerabilities continue to characterize the lives of millions in South Asia. During the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, when states turned inward to protect their own citizens, refugees and de facto stateless persons found themselves excluded from humanitarian services and health care and were denied the ability to claim rights. Stateless women faced the additional burden of gender-based violence, a hostile labor market, and the threat of trafficking. This paper analyzes gender and statelessness as vectors of exclusion in South Asia, where asylum seekers are neither recognized by law nor protected by social institutions. We argue that citizenship constitutes an unearned form of social capital that is claimed and experienced in distinctively gendered ways. The pandemic has shone a bright light on the perils of statelessness, particularly for women, who face exacerbated economic inequities, the forced commodification of their sexuality, and exclusion from mechanisms of justice.https://cdn1.sph.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/2469/2021/06/Chakraborty.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roshni Chakraborty
Jacqueline Bhabha
spellingShingle Roshni Chakraborty
Jacqueline Bhabha
Fault Lines of Refugee Exclusion: Statelessness, Gender, and COVID-19 in South Asia
Health and Human Rights
author_facet Roshni Chakraborty
Jacqueline Bhabha
author_sort Roshni Chakraborty
title Fault Lines of Refugee Exclusion: Statelessness, Gender, and COVID-19 in South Asia
title_short Fault Lines of Refugee Exclusion: Statelessness, Gender, and COVID-19 in South Asia
title_full Fault Lines of Refugee Exclusion: Statelessness, Gender, and COVID-19 in South Asia
title_fullStr Fault Lines of Refugee Exclusion: Statelessness, Gender, and COVID-19 in South Asia
title_full_unstemmed Fault Lines of Refugee Exclusion: Statelessness, Gender, and COVID-19 in South Asia
title_sort fault lines of refugee exclusion: statelessness, gender, and covid-19 in south asia
publisher Harvard FXB Center for Health and Human Rights
series Health and Human Rights
issn 2150-4113
2150-4113
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Despite widespread recognition of the right to a nationality, statelessness and its attendant vulnerabilities continue to characterize the lives of millions in South Asia. During the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, when states turned inward to protect their own citizens, refugees and de facto stateless persons found themselves excluded from humanitarian services and health care and were denied the ability to claim rights. Stateless women faced the additional burden of gender-based violence, a hostile labor market, and the threat of trafficking. This paper analyzes gender and statelessness as vectors of exclusion in South Asia, where asylum seekers are neither recognized by law nor protected by social institutions. We argue that citizenship constitutes an unearned form of social capital that is claimed and experienced in distinctively gendered ways. The pandemic has shone a bright light on the perils of statelessness, particularly for women, who face exacerbated economic inequities, the forced commodification of their sexuality, and exclusion from mechanisms of justice.
url https://cdn1.sph.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/2469/2021/06/Chakraborty.pdf
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