REFUGEE LAW CLUB RESEARCH-A-THON
19 November 2021"USA / Canada Border" by -AX- is licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0
Welcome!
This site provides resources and tools to get you started on your research journey. Start by clicking the buttons below to access the Research-a-thon Guide and research resources. Scroll down the page or use the top navigation menu to access selected secondary sources, tips for case law research, question specific resources and resources on researching foreign jurisdictions. We always encourage you to start your research with secondary sources. As always, your UVic Law Librarians are here to help guide you through this research process.
This guide offers some important context and guidance that will help you with your research shift and ensure that everyone is on the same page throughout the day.
This Google Drive contains Research-a-thon documents and is where you will submit the results of your research.
The Immigration and Refugee Legal Clinic provides free legal advice and representation, with interpretation services, for low-income people across BC.
Secondary sources
Books:
- Canadian Immigration and Refugee Law : A Practitioner’s Handbook (2017)
- Law of Refugee Status, 2nd ed (2014)
- Non-Citizens in Canada : Status and Rights, 2nd ed (2019)
- Immigration Law, 2nd ed (2015)
- Immigration Law and Practice, 2nd ed (looseleaf)
- Refugee Law, 2nd ed (2017)
E-Books:
- Canadian Immigration and Refugee Law Practice (2021 ed)
- Immigration Law, 2nd ed (2015)
- Immigration Law and Practice, 2nd ed (looseleaf)
- Refugee Law, 2nd ed (2017)
Legal encyclopedias:
Journal articles:
Search across legal indexes & databases
Key journals to look out for:
- International Journal of Refugee Law
- Georgetown Immigration Law Journal
- Journal of Refugee Studies
- Canada’s Immigration & Citizenship Bulletin
For Non-Legal Journals search Summon or Google Scholar
Current awareness:
Search legal news & blogs for recent or high profile decisions/changes to the law
- Search Quicklaw for LexisNexis Immigration Law Netletter, The Lawyer’s Daily, and other legal news
- Search across blog aggregators (Mondaq, Lexology, CanLII Connects)
Websites & organizations:
- Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada website & policy instruments
- Citizenship and Immigration Canada
- Canadian Council for Refugees
- Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
- United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees
- International Organization for Migration (IOM)
Case law research
Helpful resource to get started: Learning How to Read a Court Decision
Case digests:
Use digests to find topical summaries of decisions
- Canadian Abridgment Digests (Westlaw) > IMM Immigration and citizenship > IMM.III Refugee protection
- All Canada Digests (Quicklaw) > Canada Immigration Digest > Refugee Protection
See sections on IFA, gender based violence, membership in particular social groups, particular countries, etc.
Annotated acts:
- Annotated Immigration and Refugee Protection Act of Canada KE4454 A32C35
Searching Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada decisions :
Note: there are four divisions: Refugee Protection Division, Refugee Appeal Division, Immigration Division and Immigration Appeal Division.
- Westlaw: Selected coverage of the four divisions commencing in 1968 including all decisions reported or cited in Immigration Law Reporter since 1997 and full coverage of all decisions provided by the board in the previous 2 years.
- Quicklaw: Tribunal decisions -> federal -> can select decision for each of the divisions. Coverage: immigration appeal division decisions (January 1989 – current, selected significant decisions from 1980-1988), immigration division decisions (February 2001 – current, selected significant decisions from 1994-2000) , refugee appeal division decisions (Dec 15 2012 – current) and refugee protection division decisions (March 1989 – current)
- CanLII: full coverage 2004 – current, partial coverage 1996 – 2003.
- IRB website: lists persuasive refugee claim decisions, selected noteworthy refugee appeals, and IRB decisions of public interest
Also consider searching federal court decisions for judicial review of IRB decisions.
- “Jurisprudence update 2020: Judicial reviews of immigration and refugee board decisions” CLEBC Immigration Issues in Depth 2020.
Q1 – Establishing nexus for claims based on gang violence
Strategies:
- Search for and review commentary in secondary sources (books, journal articles, legal news and blogs)
- Review IRB website decisions to see if any of the persuasive or noteworthy cases relate to the question
- Note up relevant Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 sections 96 and 97 and add in country and/or other keywords
- Search/browse Canadian Abridgment Digest and/or All Canada Digests Refugee Protection sections, and add in country and/or other keywords to search. (Note the Abridgment only includes Federal Court decisions, while the Canadian Immigration Digest includes IRB decisions)
- Keyword search in Westlaw, Quicklaw or CanLII for tribunal decisions
- For this question it may be helpful to look to US secondary sources and decisions, see section on researching foreign jurisdictions for tips
- For keyword selection:
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- Consider all the ways risk from gangs might be described (Organized criminality, Member of criminal organization, cartel, etc.)
- Pull terminology directly from primary and secondary sources and add in various protected groups (Fear of persecution, imputed political opinion, membership in a particular social group, political opinion, women etc.)
Selected Resources:
Selected articles:
- Fleeing cartels and maras: international protection considerations and profiles from the northern triangle
- Canada Violated ICCPR in denying Salvadorian asylum on gang-related claim
- IRB issue paper: Part 1: Gangs in El Salvador and the situation of witnesses of crime and corruption
UN Resources:
- UNHCR Guidance note on refugee claims relating to victims of organized gangs (2010)
- UNDOC Report on Transnational organized crime in Central America and the Caribbean
- Guatemala Background Paper (2013)
- El Salvador Eligibility Guidelines (2016)
- Honduras Eligibility Guidelines (2016)
- Refworld (UNHCR online database): Gang-related violence (Can narrow results by publisher to “Canada: Federal Court” and “Canada: Immigration and Refugee Board”)
- Refworld (UNHCR online database): Eligibility Guidelines for Assessing the International Protection Needs of asylum-seekers from Guatemala
Q2 – IFAs in the modern digital world
Strategies:
- Search for and review commentary in secondary sources (books, journal articles, legal news and blogs)
- Review primary and secondary sources in other jurisdictions (see the Researching Foreign Law section)
- Review IRB website decisions to see if any of the persuasive or noteworthy cases relate to the question
- Search/browse Canadian Abridgment Digest and/or All Canada Digests Refugee Protection sections on IFA (Note the Abridgment only includes Federal Court decisions, while the Canadian Immigration Digest includes IRB decisions)
- Keyword search IRB decisions and federal court for decisions discussing social media and IFA
- For keyword selection consider alternative ways of describing “social media” — facebook or twitter, etc.
- keyword selection: internal flight alternative or internal relocation alternative or internal protection alternative
Selected resources:
- Interpretation of the Convention Refugee Definition in the Case Law: Including case law up to March 31, 2019 (Prepared by: IRB Legal Services) — Chapter 8 – Internal Flight Alternative
- Refworld (UNHCR database): Adjudication of asylum claims / Internal flight alternative
- UNHCR Guidelines on international protection: “internal flight or relocation alternative” within the Context of Article 1A(2) of the 1951 Convention and/or 1967 Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees
- Australian case where internal flight alternative and social media are considered: MIBP v AHL15 [2017] FCA 1178
- Digital 2021 Global Overview Report
- Digital Reportal Complete Report Library – has reports on social media usage by country
- Statista information on internet usage (by region and selected countries)
Q3 – Gender based persecution
Strategies:
- Search for and review commentary in secondary sources (books, journal articles, legal news and blogs)
- Search in the key legal treatises for gender, could also be under “membership in a particular social group”
- Review IRB website decisions to see if any of the persuasive or noteworthy cases relate to the question
- Note up relevant Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 ss96 and 97, keyword searching for gender, specifically looking at “membership in a particular social group”
- Keyword search in Westlaw, Quicklaw or CanLII for tribunal decisions
- Search/Browse Canada Abridgment Digest and Canadian Immigration Digest (Note the Abridgment only includes Federal Court decisions, while Canadian Immigration Digest includes IRB decisions)
- Look at Refworld (UNHCR database): gender-based persecution or gender discrimination
- Results can be narrowed by publisher to “Canada: Federal Court” and “Canada: Immigration and Refugee Board”
- For narrowing by topic within country reports consider topics related to gender (gender-based persecution, gender discrimination, forced marriage, honour killing, domestic violence, female genital mutilation, forced abortion etc.
Selected Resources:
IRB Guidelines:
- IRB Chairperson guidelines 4: Women refugee claimants fearing gender-related persecution (1993) (currently under review)
- IRB Chairperson’s Guideline 9: Proceedings before the IRB involving sexual orientation and gender identity and expression (2017)
IRB current work:
Books:
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- Chapter 3: Gender-related persecutions: why do women flee?
- Chapter 4: Gender and Asylum in International Law – The Geneva Convention Revisited
-
- Chapter 12: Evaluating Canada’s approach to gender-related persecution: revisiting and re-embracing ‘refugee women and the imperative of categories’
Selected journal articles:
- Report: Gendering Canada’s Refugee Process (2006)
- Gendered Perspectives on Refugee Determination in Canada (2014)
- “Wherever we would go, we would be together” the challenges for queer refugee couples claiming joint asylum in Canada (2019)
- Denying refugee protection to LGBTQ and marginalized persons: a retrospective look at state protection in Canadian refugee law (2017)
- Sexual orientation, gender identity and the refugee determination process in Canada (2014)
- Taking it personally: deliminating gender-based refugee claims using the complementary protection provision in Canada
UN Resources:
Country specific information:
Mexico
- Refworld – country report –can narrow down by topic
- IRB – national documentation package
- Responses to information requests – select Mexico
Nigeria
- Refworld – country report – can narrow down by topic
- IRB – national documentation package
- Responses to information requests – select Nigeria
- IRB issue paper: The Situation of Sexual and Gender Minorities in Nigeria (February 2019)
Iran
- Refworld – country report – can narrow down by topic
- IRB – national documentation package – select Iran
India
- Refworld – country report – can narrow down by topic
- IRB- national documentation package
- Responses to information requests – select India
Researching Foreign Jurisdictions
For some topics we may not be able to find decisions from Canada. It can be helpful to search other jurisdictions (US, UK, & Australia) to find examples that the Immigration and Refugee Legal Clinic might be able to use as supporting evidence.
Start with UNHCR RefWorld
- RefWorld contains a vast collection of reports relating to situations in countries of origin, policy documents and positions, and documents relating to international and national legal frameworks – notably the jurisprudence collection, covers more than 40 national jurisdictions, and a vast amount of international judgments and decisions from the United Nations, the European Court of Human Rights and other international and regional courts.
- You can perform a keyword search in the case law or browse by country and topic.
Australia:
Search the library catalogue for secondary sources, try the following subject headings:
- Emigration and immigration law–Australia.
- Political refugees–Legal status, laws, etc.–Australia.
- Asylum, Right of–Australia.
Case law tips:
- Look at Refugee Review Tribunal (pre-2015) and Administrative Appeals Tribunal (post-2015), Federal Courts and higher courts.
- Australia case law available in:
Australia focused research guides
- Murdoch University Refugee Law Guide
- Guide to Refugee Law in Australia
- Australian National University International Refugee Law guide
United Kingdom:
Search the library catalogue for secondary sources, try the following subject headings:
- Asylum, Right of–Great Britain.
- Refugees–Legal status, laws, etc.–Great Britain.
- Refugees–Government policy–Great Britain.
- See also: Halsbury’s Laws of England – Immigration & Asylum (in Quicklaw)
Case law tips:
- Look for: Asylum and Immigration Tribunal, Upper Tribunal, Appeal Court, Administrative Court, and High Court.
- UK case law available in: BAILII, JUSTIS, ICLR, and Westlaw (International materials > United Kingdom)
UK focused research guides
United States:
Search the library catalogue for secondary sources, try the following subject headings:
- Refugees–Legal status, laws, etc.–United States.
- Asylum, Right of–United States.
- Refugees–Government policy–United States.
Case law tips:
- Look for: United States Board of Immigration Appeals and Appeal courts from all circuits.
- US case law in available in: Westlaw: International materials > Westlaw US Homepage > Practice Areas > Immigration > Immigration Administrative Decisions & Guidance
US focused research guides:
- Cornell Asylum Law and Convention Against Torture Guide
- Cornell Immigration Law Guide
- Georgetown Law CALS Asylum Case research guide (has a specific section on gangs)
- UCLA Immigration Law research guide
Global sources & research guides:
- The Oxford handbook of international refugee law / edited by Cathryn Costello, Michelle Foster and Jane McAdam.
- Search the library catalogue for secondary sources, try the following subject headings:
- Global Lex: Researching the Legal Aspects of Asylum Seekers and Refugees in Australia, Canada, United Kingdom and the European Union
- University of Melbourne: Refugee & Asylum Seeker Law Research Guide (covers Australia, UK, Canada, and US)