Rethinking EU Law Beyond the Liberal Feminist Paradigm
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| Publication date | 18-09-2024 |
| Publisher | Verfassungsblog |
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| Abstract |
Can a belief in the value of gender equality associated with the lifestyle of the westernized woman be regarded as a reason for persecution and thus lead to the granting of refugee status under the Qualification Directive 2011/95? In the recent case K,L v Staatssecretaris van Justitie en Veiligheid (‘K,L’), the CJEU decided that it can. To this end, it characterized the belief as a type of ‘identificatory’ conviction that was so fundamental to the young women’s life choices that it rendered them part of a ‘particular social group.’ It thereby declined to follow the referring court’s reasoning which had instead conceptualized the belief as a ‘religious belief’ or a ‘political opinion.’
The decision has largely been welcomed as a positive development towards a gender-sensitive EU asylum law (see here and here). In this blogpost, I complexify this reading of the case by showing that it begets a tension between the liberal feminist philosophical paradigm and its critics. Specifically, I argue that the CJEU’s classification of the young women’s belief in the value of gender equality as ‘identificatory’ (as opposed to ‘religious’ or ‘political’) perpetuates a long-standing criticism of the liberal feminist paradigm, namely its failure to acknowledge the private realm as an important sphere for advancing women’s equality. |
| Document type | Web publication or website |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.59704/6902e898e493af0e |
| Downloads |
verfassungsblog.de-Rethinking EU Law Beyond the Liberal Feminist Paradigm
(Final published version)
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