TY - JOUR
T1 - A review of psycho-legal issues in credibility assessments of asylum claims based on religion
AU - Selim, Hedayat
AU - Korkman, Julia
AU - Nynäs, Peter
AU - Pirjatanniemi, Elina
AU - Antfolk, Jan
N1 - This manuscript has been accepted for publication. To cite the article, please refer to the forthcoming version, which will be published in Psychiatry, Psychology and Law.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Religious persecution is a leading cause of global displacement. In the absence of supporting evidence, presenting a credible oral asylum claim based on religion is a difficult task for asylum-seekers. Asylum officials, in turn, face considerable challenges in evaluating the credibility of asylum-seekers’ claims to determine their eligibility for refugee status. We reviewed 21 original manuscripts addressing credibility assessments of asylum claims based on religion. We focused on (1) officials’ methods of eliciting a religious claim in the asylum interview; (2) their credibility assessments of particularly complex asylum claims, namely those based on religious conversion, unfamiliar religions, and absence of religion; and (3) issues related to the presence of an interpreter. We found deviations in officials’ assessment patterns from established knowledge in both legal psychology and the scientific study of religion. Closer collaboration between asylum practitioners and researchers in these fields is needed to improve the validity and reliability of credibility assessments of asylum claims based on religion.
AB - Religious persecution is a leading cause of global displacement. In the absence of supporting evidence, presenting a credible oral asylum claim based on religion is a difficult task for asylum-seekers. Asylum officials, in turn, face considerable challenges in evaluating the credibility of asylum-seekers’ claims to determine their eligibility for refugee status. We reviewed 21 original manuscripts addressing credibility assessments of asylum claims based on religion. We focused on (1) officials’ methods of eliciting a religious claim in the asylum interview; (2) their credibility assessments of particularly complex asylum claims, namely those based on religious conversion, unfamiliar religions, and absence of religion; and (3) issues related to the presence of an interpreter. We found deviations in officials’ assessment patterns from established knowledge in both legal psychology and the scientific study of religion. Closer collaboration between asylum practitioners and researchers in these fields is needed to improve the validity and reliability of credibility assessments of asylum claims based on religion.
U2 - 10.1080/13218719.2022.2116611
DO - 10.1080/13218719.2022.2116611
M3 - Article
SN - 1321-8719
VL - 30
JO - Psychiatry, Psychology and Law
JF - Psychiatry, Psychology and Law
IS - 6
ER -