Queerly Faithful

Queer People's Experience of Religion in Asylum Seeking

Claire Fletcher
Emerald
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Paperback / softback
9781837974917
09 November 2026
£20.00
Available to order on 10 October 2026
eBook (PDF)
9781837974887
19 October 2026
£0.00
Open Access Available to order on 19 September 2026
eBook (ePub)
9781837974900
19 October 2026
£0.00
Open Access Available to order on 19 September 2026

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  • Description
  • Contents
  • About
  • Open Access

The ebook edition of this title is Open Access and freely available to read online.

An assumption present in refugee status determinations is that there is an incompatibility of religious faith and queer subjectivity. Queerly Faithful considers religious experiences throughout the lives of queer people who seek asylum to show the complexity of queer people’s lives in country of origin, the legal asylum process and rebuilding lives in host countries. How do queer people experience religion before and after arrival into the UK to claim asylum?

Providing new empirical data in an under researched area, Fletcher examines the nexus of queer subjectivity, religion and asylum seeking, highlighting life history interviews with queer people seeking asylum and with those who respond to them, either in a faith-based context, legal provision, or NGO responses. By exploring three key areas country-of-origin (CoO) experience, the intersection of the legal and social in the UK asylum context, and religious responses in the UK to those who are forced to flee due to queer subjectivity Fletcher shows how the stereotypical assumption that faith and queer subjectivity are not compatible is not only incorrect but can limit people’s ability to gain refugee protection. Challenging dominant narratives of a homogenously homophobic global south by demonstrating the complexity of strategies interlocutors employ to remain in CoO, the research also shows how religious responses can provide help and healing for LGBTQI+ people who seek asylum in the UK.

Making recommendations on how faith spaces can become more visibly welcoming to those with queer subjectivities who are within the asylum process, this is important reading for academics and students in the sub-disciplines of forced migration studies, sexuality studies, sociology of religion and queer feminist theory.

Introduction

  • Chapter 1. Religious Experiences and the Conceptualisation of Queer Selfhoods
  • Chapter 2. Hostility and Harm: Structural Failures in UK Asylum Support for LGBTQI+ People
  • Chapter 3. Seeking Sanctuary: Religious Experiences Seeking Asylum in the UK
  • Chapter 4. The Paradox of Faith: Religious Experiences in Sexual Orientation Asylum Claims
  • Chapter 5. Redoing Religion: Religious Experience as a Resource for Healing among LGBTQI+ People Seeking Asylum
  • Chapter 6. Thick Solidarities: Local Faith Community Support for LGBTQI+ People Seeking Safety
  • Final Remarks

Claire Fletcher is a Visiting Fellow at Oxford Brookes University and an academic consultant. She specialises in the UK asylum system and the experiences of LGBTQI+ people. She currently also employed as the Policy Manager at Micro Rainbow International Foundation which is an organisation that provides safe housing, social inclusion, advocacy and employability support, to ensure the wellbeing and integration of LGBTQI people seeking asylum in the UK.