Tracing the Coloniality of Queer and Trans Migrations: Resituating Heterocisnormative Violence in the Global South and Encounters with Migrant Visa Ineligibility to Canada

Most of the scholarship on queer and trans migrants focuses on the refugee experience post-migration to Canada. In contrast, this article draws from a doctoral study that included participant interviews and policy/media textual analysis to map out the historical, geopolitical, social, and economic...

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Main Author: Edward Ou Jin Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: York University Libraries 2018-06-01
Series:Refuge
Subjects:
Online Access:https://refuge.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/refuge/article/view/40485
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author Edward Ou Jin Lee
author_facet Edward Ou Jin Lee
author_sort Edward Ou Jin Lee
collection DOAJ
description Most of the scholarship on queer and trans migrants focuses on the refugee experience post-migration to Canada. In contrast, this article draws from a doctoral study that included participant interviews and policy/media textual analysis to map out the historical, geopolitical, social, and economic dimensions that shape homophobic and transphobic violence across the globe, as well as queer and trans migrations from the Global South to Canada. These realities are analyzed through the lens of coloniality and on the scale of empire to historicize how queer and trans migrant lives are shaped by forgotten histories of colonial violence. This study suggests that the hyper-visibility of Canada’s “generous” treatment of queer and trans refugees obscures how its border regime blocks people from the Global South from entry.
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spelling doaj-art-110a1f8570f44de5b0bb85b2e19baa372025-01-10T21:41:37ZengYork University LibrariesRefuge0229-51131920-73362018-06-0134110.7202/1050855arTracing the Coloniality of Queer and Trans Migrations: Resituating Heterocisnormative Violence in the Global South and Encounters with Migrant Visa Ineligibility to CanadaEdward Ou Jin Lee0Université de Montréal Most of the scholarship on queer and trans migrants focuses on the refugee experience post-migration to Canada. In contrast, this article draws from a doctoral study that included participant interviews and policy/media textual analysis to map out the historical, geopolitical, social, and economic dimensions that shape homophobic and transphobic violence across the globe, as well as queer and trans migrations from the Global South to Canada. These realities are analyzed through the lens of coloniality and on the scale of empire to historicize how queer and trans migrant lives are shaped by forgotten histories of colonial violence. This study suggests that the hyper-visibility of Canada’s “generous” treatment of queer and trans refugees obscures how its border regime blocks people from the Global South from entry. https://refuge.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/refuge/article/view/40485LGBT refugeesCanadaGlobal Southmigrationcolonialityvisas
spellingShingle Edward Ou Jin Lee
Tracing the Coloniality of Queer and Trans Migrations: Resituating Heterocisnormative Violence in the Global South and Encounters with Migrant Visa Ineligibility to Canada
Refuge
LGBT refugees
Canada
Global South
migration
coloniality
visas
title Tracing the Coloniality of Queer and Trans Migrations: Resituating Heterocisnormative Violence in the Global South and Encounters with Migrant Visa Ineligibility to Canada
title_full Tracing the Coloniality of Queer and Trans Migrations: Resituating Heterocisnormative Violence in the Global South and Encounters with Migrant Visa Ineligibility to Canada
title_fullStr Tracing the Coloniality of Queer and Trans Migrations: Resituating Heterocisnormative Violence in the Global South and Encounters with Migrant Visa Ineligibility to Canada
title_full_unstemmed Tracing the Coloniality of Queer and Trans Migrations: Resituating Heterocisnormative Violence in the Global South and Encounters with Migrant Visa Ineligibility to Canada
title_short Tracing the Coloniality of Queer and Trans Migrations: Resituating Heterocisnormative Violence in the Global South and Encounters with Migrant Visa Ineligibility to Canada
title_sort tracing the coloniality of queer and trans migrations resituating heterocisnormative violence in the global south and encounters with migrant visa ineligibility to canada
topic LGBT refugees
Canada
Global South
migration
coloniality
visas
url https://refuge.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/refuge/article/view/40485
work_keys_str_mv AT edwardoujinlee tracingthecolonialityofqueerandtransmigrationsresituatingheterocisnormativeviolenceintheglobalsouthandencounterswithmigrantvisaineligibilitytocanada