"We Do Not Matter”: Transgender Migrants/Refugees in the Dutch Asylum System

Publication date

2018-03

Authors

van der Pijl, Y.ISNI 0000000390505776
Oude Breuil, BrendaISNI 0000000394856493
Swetzer, Lene
Drymioti, MarilenaISNI 0000000493349083
Goderie, M.J.H.ISNI 0000000387191972

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Article

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Abstract

Although the Netherlands is renowned for its forerunner position in lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender/transsexual, and intersex (LGBTI) rights, this study urges one to question whether it can still live up to that image. Reports, news items, and signals from non-governmental organizations, such as Transgender Network Netherlands in the field show that especially transgender migrants/refugees regularly face abuse and discrimination. Yet, academic research underlying such findings is scarce. Moreover, a highly gendered discourse on the current migration/refugee crisis makes transgender migrants/refugees even more invisible. This article presents an interpretive approach to the institutional and disciplinary realities they become part of. The approach comes from (1) a literature review, surveying both scholarly publications and other sources; (2) patchwork or instant ethnography, thickening the findings from the literature; (3) and foremostly a theoretical interpretation of the precarious situation in which many transgender migrants/refugees find themselves. We draw upon synthesizing concepts such as “total institution” (Goffman 1961; Henry 1963), “human waste” (Bauman 2004), and “armed love” (Ticktin 2011) to constitute our theoretical framework, through which we show that transgender migrants/refugees are met with compassion and pity, rather than equal rights and full citizenship. This bitter logic leads us to the conclusion that within the Dutch asylum system, transgender migrants/refugees are rendered politically irrelevant, which eventually reflects the main priority of the Dutch authorities (and society at large) to control the boundaries of the nation-state, rather than to address the needs and rights of those people who seek, on legitimate grounds, a passport to a better, that is, a full life.

Keywords

transgender migrants/refugees, invisibility, exclusion, sexual violence, the Netherlands, SDG 5 - Gender Equality, SDG 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

Citation

van der Pijl, Y, Oude Breuil, B C M, Swetzer, L, Drymioti, M & Goderie, M J H 2018, '"We Do Not Matter” : Transgender Migrants/Refugees in the Dutch Asylum System', Violence and Gender, vol. 5, no. 1, pp. 1-11. https://doi.org/10.1089/vio.2017.0009