Key Funding Area

LGBTQIA+ Forcibly Displaced People

In 2020, Pride Foundation Australia began our focus on the Key Area of LGBTQIA+ forcibly displaced people living in Australia. 

LGBTQIA+ forcibly displaced people in Australia face unique challenges accessing community and settlement support that is both affirming of their gender and/or sexuality and culturally appropriate. Since queer forcibly displaced people are often doing so from countries and cultures that are not accepting of LGBTQIA+ identities, they often struggle to find a sense of belonging and community within their own diaspora and the Australian queer community. 

There is very little funding—government or otherwise—to improve the conditions of settlement and support for LGBTQIA+ forcibly displaced people.

Partner Organisations

Our knowledge in this area is significant, but there are many groups that have real expertise and lived experience, and we want to work with them in partnership. Groups we have collaborated with include…

Advisory Committee

2025 TO PRESENT

Ruth McNair (Chair, PFA), Mollie Hewitt (PFA), Ayan Dasvarma (PFA), Mayna Hung (Asylum Seeker Centre Support Group), Renee Dixson (Forcibly Displaced People Network FDPN), Alex Duarte (FDPN), Noushin Barghi (Lived experience), Ian Seal (Three For All Foundation), Jasmina Bajraktarevic (Service for the Treatment and Rehabilitation of Torture and Trauma Survivors), Edwin Adrianta (Third Queer Culture), Mikhael Touma (Queer Arab Australia), Farnaz Shahimi (Foundation House)

MAY 2019 TO 2023

Ruth McNair (Chair, PFA), Dennis Altman (Patron PFA), Sarina Jackson (PFA), Peter Waters (PFA), Liz Rickman (ALMA), Amber Loomis (LGBTI Health Australia), Renee Dixson (Forcibly Displaced People Network FDPN), Ian Seal (Three for All), Manu Kailom (Many Coloured Sky), Alastair Lawrie, Sophie de Rohan (Refugee Immigration Legal Centre VIC), Alison Ryan and Ben Lumsdaine (Refugee Advice and Casework Service RACS NSW), Margherita Coppolino (National Ethnic Disability Alliances), Azlan A.P. (Uniting), Olivia Coljar (Ishar Multicultural Women’s Health Service WA), Emily Drew (Multicultural Australia QLD), Meryl Jones (Mater Refugee Health Service QLD), Satrio Nindyo Istiko (QLD), Julian Punch (Rainbow Communities Tasmania Inc. Organisation with special reference to the LGBTIQ+ Asylum Seeker Group from the 72 Countries that Execute, Imprison, Persecute and Torture), Heather Grace Jones (STARTTS NSW), Toni Maldari (Refugee Health Service SA), Frances Rush (ASC NSW), Greg Storer (ASRC VIC).

Funding granted to projects advocating for LGBTQIA+ Forcibly Displaced People

Refugee Advice and Casework Service
2024 | $20,000
RMIT University
2024 | $20,000

A project aimed to enhance the interlingual and intercultural competencies of interpreters and translators in communicating diversity to ensure nothing is lost in translation for LGBTIQA+ migrants when they access public services.

Asylum Seekers Centre
2023 | $20,000
2024 | $20,000
Multicultural Youth South Australia
2023 | $20,000

The purchase and installation of a telehealth system that will enable MYSA’s team of social workers, psychologists and peer workers to connect with refugee, asylum seeker, and migrant LGBTQIA+ youth in rural South Australia.

Australia and New Zealand Tongzhi Rainbow Alliance (ANTRA)
2023 | $20,000

A project aimed to address the lack of support for forcibly displaced Queer Chinese individuals in Australia by providing a safe and inclusive space for these individuals to connect, share experiences, and receive peer support from trained volunteers who understand their unique challenges.

Tasmanian Refugee Legal Service
2023 | $20,000

A program designed to address the critical unmet legal needs of LGBTIQA+ migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers in Tasmania.

Forcibly Displaced People Network
2022 | $20,000

Formation of a coalition that will advocate nationally in Australia for systemic change to reduce disadvantage and marginalisation of LGBTIQA+ asylum seekers and refugees.

Forcibly Displaced People Network
2022 | $53,000
2023 | $35,000

Employment of a Peer and advocacy project worker and an Administrative assistant for 1 year to provide support for peer-led support groups around Australia and contribute to advocacy activities of FDPN.

Three For All/Many Coloured Sky
2022 | $20,000

To employ an other-gendered refugee/asylum-seeker to work alongside their Peer Support Officer at the Queer Asylum Seekers support group.

2024 | $20,000

Provision of small funds to meet immediate needs of individual LGBTQI+ refugees or people seeking asylum who are involved in QRASP.

LASSA Ltd
2022 | $5,000

The Unicorn Project is a LASSA initiative with the mission of providing a safe, supportive, and inclusive space to the LGBTQIA+ community who have arrived in South Australia under a refugee and asylum seeker status.

Sparkling Productions
2022 | $5,000

Supporting the work of Safety Place, a peer-led LGBTQIA+ refugee and asylum seeker support group in Adelaide.

Asylum Seekers Centre
2022 | $10,000

Supporting the work of the peer-led LGBTQIA+ refugee and asylum seeker support group in Sydney.

Forcibly Displaced People Network
2022 | $5,000

Supporting the work of the peer-led LGBTQIA+ refugee and asylum seeker support group in Canberra.

Queensland Program of Assistance for Survivors of Torture and Trauma (QPASTT)
2021 | $5,000
2022 | $5,000

Supporting the work of Third Queer Culture, a peer-led LGBTQIA+ refugee and asylum seeker support group in Brisbane.

Three For All
2021 | $5,000

Supporting the work of the peer-led LGBTQIA+ refugee and asylum seeker support group in Melbourne.

Multicultural Youth Advocacy Network (MYAN)
2021 | $20,000

The development of a national survey and consultation to explore to specific settlement experiences and subsequent needs of young LGBTQIA+ refugees and asylum seekers in Australia.

Forcibly Displaced People Network
2020 | $20,000

The development of an online training resource on LGBTIQ refugees and asylum seekers for settlement services and LGBTIQ organisations. Available at: www.fdpn.org.au/lgbtiq-settlement-training

Refugee Advice & Casework Service
2020 | $20,000
Migrant Resource Centre Tasmania, Working It Out and AGMC
2020 | $20,000

A guide to Australian law relating to LGBTQIA+ anti-discrimination and health rights, which will be translated into 15 languages and recorded as audio files.

Academic Publications

Understanding key priority areas of mental health among queer asylum seekers and refugees in Australia through the lens of structural violence: A modified Delphi method study

AUGUST 2024

Satrio Nindyo Istiko, Andrian Liem, Edwin Adrianta Surijah, Ignacio Correa-Velez, Understanding key priority areas of mental health among queer asylum seekers and refugees in Australia through the lens of structural violence: A modified Delphi method study, Journal of Refugee Studies, 2024;, feae067, https://doi.org/10.1093/jrs/feae067

Online Training: Building service capacity to work with LGBTIQ+ forcibly displaced people

November 2021

Presented to the LGBTI Parliamentary Friends, Canberra  Co-Chairs Mr Warren Entsch MP, Mr Graham Perrett MP and Senator Janet Rice This training module has been created in partnership with Meridian, an ACT-based LGBTIQ+ peer-led organisation, BridgeMeals, Melbourne-based community group for LGBITQ+ refugees and migrants, Migration Council of Australia a national non for profit supporting better outcomes for migrants and refugees and ANU Centre for Digital Humanities Research. The creation of this module was possible thanks to a grant from the Pride Foundation Australia.

Briefing Document on Contemporary Issues for Refugees and People Seeking Asylum Who Have Diverse Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity and Expression, and Sexual Characteristics (SOGIESC)

DECEMBER 2019

Presented to the LGBTI Parliamentary Friends, Canberra  Co-Chairs Mr Warren Entsch MP, Mr Graham Perrett MP and Senator Janet Rice By Associate Professor Ruth McNair AM, Chairperson Pride Foundation Australia. On behalf of The Pride Foundation Australia LGBTIQA+ advisory group

Press & Media

Watch these videos from partner organisations on the work we’ve completed around LGBTQIA+ forcibly displaced people in Australia.

  1. Tiko and Elfaz, from Third Queer Culture speak on the challenges faced by LGBTQIA+ forcibly displaced people in Australia.
  2. Former co-founder Tina Dixson and current founder Renee Dixson of Forcibly Displaced People Network, and Ine Bereens from Migration Council Australia discuss their work on improving settlement services for LGBTQIA+ forcibly displaced people in Australia.
  3. Aired on an episode of SBS, this clip features a Sydney based CRISP community sponsorship group run by Dean Johnstone.
  4. Mr VicBear 2024, Joenas Galinato, speaks about the the work PFA is doing in supporting LGBTQIA+ forcibly displaced people in Australia at the 2024 underwear auction that raised $7k for PFA.

Latest News

Multicultural Youth SA Receive Grant Funding for “Rainbow Refuge: Telehealth Mental Health Support”

The Health & Wellbeing of LGBTQIA+ People in Rural Australia – A new report

A New Car for Queer Refugee Couple Marya and Carmen

New article published on the mental health of queer refugees and people seeking asylum

Join The Sub-fund for Community Sponsorship

Community Sponsorship is a proven method to enable safe settlement through arrangement of a humanitarian visa in a transition country, safe passage to the host country, and local community support for at least the first year. We’re working to build the financial and people resources of the LGBTIQ+ refugee sponsorship sub-fund.

Acknowledgement of Country

Pride Foundation Australia pays respect to the traditional custodians of the land and sea on which we live, work and play, we pay our respects to Elders past and present, acknowledging that sovereignty was never ceded.

Pride Foundation Australia commits through the resources we have available to us, to work with, for, and alongside Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander and South Sea Islander LGBTIQ+ Sistergirl and Brotherboy peoples and communities to embed a self-determined future.

We further commit the contribution of a significant proportion of grant funding received to Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander and South Sea Islander LGBTIQ+ Sistergirl and Brotherboy led initiatives to improve social outcomes.

Australia was, and always will be Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander land.