RT Article T1 Sanctuary as social justice: a feminist critique JF Feminist responses to injustices of the state and its institutions SP 141 OP 157 A1 Canning, Victoria LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1924960907 AB The concept of social justice is fundamental to refugee status. That one might be subjected to or fear persecution, but offered protection under the 1951 Refugee Convention, was a monumental addition to post-Second World War responses to the injustices of both the Holocaust and of broader violations of human rights and human dignity. Thus, for survivors of persecution, the prospect of rebuilding a life in perceptively safe states - through the sanctuary offered by such protections - is a central form of justice. This chapter outlines injustices women disproportionately face as part of a continuum of violence prior to seeking asylum and through the process itself. Sanctuary is, I argue, perforated with the diffusion of controls through asylum by trial; the use of immigration detention; and in the centralization of criminal justice responses to sexual trafficking in place of truly humanitarian interventions. In all, the process of seeking asylum is itself a kind of Kafkaesque trial, and as such this chapter offers interventions which might truly centralize an alternative feminist social justice. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 154-157 SN 9781529207293