Moving On

Supporting newly granted LGBTQI refugees with employability, integration and rebuilding their lives in the UK.

10

worshops delivered in 2025, improving employability for LGBTQI refugees

60 %

Moving On programme participants felt an increased sense of independence

0

Countries around the world criminalise homosexuality

About our Moving On programme

Homosexuality is criminalised in more than 60 countries around the world and society persecutes and discriminates against LGBTQI people in even more countries. Those LGBTQI people who fear for their lives are sometimes able to reach the UK and claim asylum on the basis of their sexual orientation, and/or their gender identity, and/or the way their bodies looks. After going through the asylum determination process, successful LGBTQI claimants are subject to a number of further issues, including poverty, that extend their experience of marginalisation and exclusion in their new country.

Micro Rainbow’s work and consultations with LGBTQI refugees show that:

  • they often live in poverty
  • the major obstacles to finding employment are:
    • the lack of UK-based work experience as well as their refugee status, race, sexuality and gender which are intersecting issues that put them at the fringes of the job market
    • the qualifications that they have gained in their countries of origin are often not valid in the UK
    • low confidence and self-esteem
  • the material hardships of their everyday lives emerging from the simple fact of being an LGBTQI refugee include:
    • opening a bank account when presenting their refugee documents;
    • the sudden suspicion of potential employers as soon as they became aware that they are refugees; and
    • the rejection of their family members, co-nationals and places of faith in the UK.

 After piloting and testing activities for over ten years, we have shaped an LGBTQI-refugee centred moving on programme which is already showing three interesting results:

  • it creates new, practical and life-changing opportunities for LGBTQI refugees
  • it changes social attitudes and the negative stereotypes that society often associates with LGBTQI refugees
  • it provides new data and life stories that are powerful tools for advocacy.

Getting started

This consists of one-to-one support to those who have recently become refugees in order to:

  • register with Universal Credit
  • open bank accounts

Employability

Micro Rainbow works with various partners, including the third and private sector, to:

  • provide one to one support over a period of six to twelve months to prepare and review a moving on plan (e.g. to find employment)
  • organise workshops around CV writing and interview skills
  • facilitate job opportunities

Fellowship programme

This programme is exclusively for LGBTQI asylum seekers and refugees. It is designed to ensure visibility and leadership of people with lived experience within Micro Rainbow and the wider society.

Upcoming Moving On events

Find upcoming employability events for LGBTQI refugees and people seeking asylum.

Improving employability skills with Weil, Gotshal and Manges LLP

Learn about how employability workshops can help you progress

CV masterclass with Trinnovo Group

The team from Trinnovo Group worked with Micro Rainbow to deliver a CV masterclass to our community.

Help us create a world where no LGBTQI person seeking safety is left behind

Our work is only possible because of people like you. Your support helps us provide housing, community, and opportunities to those rebuilding their lives after fleeing persecution.

There are many ways to take action. You can donate or become an ally to help sustain our services, contact us if you’d like to collaborate or learn more, or give through our Amazon wishlist to provide essential items for our safe houses. 

Become an ally

Show your support for LGBTQI refugees and asylum seekers by becoming a Micro Rainbow ally.

Donate items for our safehouses

Give practical help by purchasing essential items for our safehouses.

Get in touch

Get in touch to collaborate, ask questions, or make a referral for an LGBTQI asylum seeker or refugee,