- Statelessness
Statelessness is the
legal and social concept of a person lacking belonging (or a legally enforceable claim) to any recognisedstate . Statelessness is not always the same as lack ofcitizenship . De jure statelessness is where there exists no recognisedstate in respect of which the subject has a legally meritorious basis to claim nationality.De facto statelessness is where the subject may have a legally meritorious claim but is precluded from asserting it because of practical considerations such as cost, circumstances of civil disorder, or the fear of persecution.
girls, 1917. Statelessness characterises the existence of nomadic Gypsies]
Problems of statelessness
Common ways people may become stateless and which are addressed by the
1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness are:
*Renunciation of nationality
*Deprivation of nationality (e.g. for disloyalty, fortreason , for obtaining nationality byfraud , or as a consequence of marriage or divorce)
*Membership of a group which is denied citizen status in the country on whose territory they are born (e.g. Gypsy andJews in Third Reich Germany [1935-1945] ) - seeNuremberg Laws )
*Birth tostateless person parents
*Birth in disputed territories
*Birth in an area ruled by an entity whose independence is not internationally recognized (e.g.Manchukuo 1932-1945)
*Birth on territory over which no modern state claims sovereignty (e.g. the unclaimed region ofAntarctica )
*By excessive fees and burdensome administrative and evidential requirements involved in claimingnationality
*By theconflict of laws between two states (e.g. between the laws of the mother's nationality and those of the father's both working to deny either nationality by descent to the child)
*Transfer of territory orsovereignty which altersnationality status of persons in the territories so transferred Statelessness creates problems for states and disadvantages for those left stateless, such as:
*Frequently, diminishedcivil rights in comparison to the nationals of the states where they reside. This may be so despite the uplifting content and humanitarian purposes of the1954 Convention Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons . Stateless persons lackingidentity document s may be treated as though they "do not exist" for administrative purposes by the various organs of the state.
*A perception that stateless persons lack loyalty and commitment to their country of residence
*Lack of the ability to endow their children and close family member with anationality
*Inability, except through the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, to avail themselves of consular services when outside their country of usual residence
*No 'home' country to which they are guaranteed the unquestioned right of return
*For states, statelessness frustratesdeportation action, as there is no recipient country obliged to accept the stateless person so subjectedSome advantages of statelessness:
* The stateless person may avoid obligations ofcitizenship , such as civil or militaryconscription , compulsion to vote, and compulsion to renderjury service. It is worth noting that many nations retain the right to conscript permanent residents, regardless of their nationality or lack thereof.Tax es also may still be assessed.
* The status of stateless persons at least outranks that of anenemy alien in time ofwar tatelessness and refugees
Statelessness most commonly affects
refugee s although not all refugees are stateless, and not all stateless persons may be able to qualify as refugees. Refugee status entails the extra requirements that the refugee is outside their country ofnationality (or country of habitual residence if stateless), and is deserving of asylum based upon a well-founded fear of persecution for categorized reasons which make him/her unwilling or unable to avail the protection of that country.tatelessness and children
Principle 3 of the 1959
Declaration of the Rights of the Child asserts that:"The child shall be entitled from his birth to a name and a
nationality ."States bound by the 1989UN Convention on the Rights of the Child are obligated to implement policies and programs to ensure that children's families and national authorities can securecitizenship for every child in the country.In practice, when a child’s birth is not registered that child’s existence may not be acknowledged and the child "may" be denied citizenship. Some governing bodies refuse to recognize births — and therefore the existence and the nationality of some children - because of race,
ethnicity , or questions of "legitimacy."Characteristics of statelessness affect
Amerasian children and young adults inSoutheast Asia . They are commonly fathered abroad by US servicemen and mothers of Asian nationalities.tatelessness and women
An attempt to reduce discrimination against women is made in the 1957
Convention on the Nationality of Married Women with its provisions to prevent the automatic acquisition of the husband's citizenship. It also intends to prevent women losingcitizenship and becomingstateless if they marry a stateless man. [ [http://www1.umn.edu/humanrts/instree/w1cnmw.html Full Text of Convention on the Nationality of Married Women] ]tatelessness prior to World War II
Statelessness characterised the status of
slaves and inhabitants of conquered territories in theGreco-Roman world of antiquity. In antiquity, statelessness could be seen to affect captive and subject populations denied full citizenship (seeRoman Citizen ) including those enslaved e.g. conquered populations excluded from Roman citizenship such as theGauls immediately following theGallic Wars ;Israelites underBabylonian captivity .Characteristics of statelessness are seen amongst apostates and slaves in Islamic society; the former being persons shunned by or rejecting their tribal/national/ethno-religious birth identity, the latter being persons separated from that identity and subsumed into an
underclass role. Statelessness has perennially characterised the existence ofRoma People by virtue of their nomadic lifestyles over centuries of traversing lands claimed by others.The Office International Nansen pour les Réfugiés, was an organization of the
League of Nations , which was internationally in charge ofrefugees from war areas from 1930 to 1939. It received theNobel Peace Prize in 1938. TheirNansen passports , designed in 1922 by founderFridtjof Nansen , were internationally recognized identity cards first issued by theLeague of Nations to stateless refugees. In 1942 they were honored by governments in 52 countries and were the firstrefugee travel document s.UN Action addressing the problem of statelessness
The initial focus of UN Action was the sponsorship of Conventions in 1954 (the 'Status Convention') and 1961 (the 'Reduction Convention') resulting in instruments of
international law . Continuing action through theUNHCR encourages member states to take up ratification and address statelessness within their own borders by programs of naturalisation and co-operation with neighbouringstates .UNHCR also conducts public education campaigns to highlight the plight of stateless communities in special need.Outside of the UN, regional initiatives to address statelessness and its associated problems can be seen in
multilateral treaty instruments such as theCouncil of Europe Convention on Reduction of Statelessness in Relation to State Succession.ECOSOC, The ILC, The 1951 Refugee Convention
Migrations forced by political instability during
World War II and its immediate aftermath highlighted the international dimension of the problems presented by unprecedented volumes of displaced persons including those rendered effectively stateless.Dating from December 1948 and with the imprimatur of the world communit acting through the
United Nations , theUniversal Declaration of Human Rights at Article 15 affirms that
#Everyone has the right to a nationality.
#No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his nationality nor denied the right to change his nationality.In 1949, the
International Law Commission included the topic "Nationality, "including statelessness" in its list of topics of international law provisionally selected for codification. At the behest of the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) in 1950, that item was given priority.The Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees was done on 28 July 1951, later attracting the signatures of 145 State partiesAs of late January 2005. [ [http://www.unhcr.org.uk/press/press_releases2005/pr25Jan05.htm UNHCR in the UK - News and press ] ]
The
International Law Commission at its fifth session in 1953 produced both a Draft Convention on the "Elimination" of Future Statelessness, and a Draft Convention on the "Reduction" of Future Statelessness.ECOSOC approved both drafts.A Convention Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons was signed in September 1954. [http://www.unhcr.org/protect/PROTECTION/3bbb25729.pdf] It was complemented by the '
Statelessness Reduction Convention ' seven years afterwards.tatus Convention
The 1954 Status Convention provided for the
UNHCR to issuetravel document s to stateless persons. It urged for stateless persons to be treated at least as fairly as aliens and in some cases to be treated the same asnationals by Contracting States (e.g. in their access to the courts, their rights to movable property, their rights tointellectual property ). It also acknowledged the problem of stateless seamen by urging that states should confer theircitizenship on such people according to the flags of the vessels to which they are attached.Albert Einstein was a stateless person in the period 1896-1901. In 1933 he was affected by German race laws standing him down from his professorship. He renounced hisGerman citizenship , became arefugee , and was granted asylum in theUSA . From 1940 until his death he enjoyeddual citizenship ofSwitzerland and the USA.Reduction Convention
The 1961 Statelessness Reduction Convention was a significant aspirational achievement in working to eliminate the problem of statelessness, or at least the problems associated with it. The Reduction Convention is binding on those states that have ratified or acceded to it and it also works to create norms and to codify and confirm principles of
customary international law as they relate tonationality law existing at the time of its formation. Among these would be:
* States have absolutesovereignty to confer theirnationality on any person for any reason
* Otherwise stateless persons may avail birthright citizenship of the place of their birth (or of the place where they were found, in the case of afoundling ), otherwise they may take the nationality of one of their parents or that of another Contracting State in which they have resided for a qualifying period
* An otherwise stateless person born in wedlock shall have the right to take the nationality of their mother
* A stateless person has some time beyond attaining adulthood to seek to claim the benefit of the Convention. That time is always at least three years from the age of eighteen.
* The benefit of the Convention may be claimed by guardians on behalf of their wards.
* States may impose a period of residence qualification for granting nationality to persons who may be otherwisestateless . That period is a maximum five years immediately prior to application and maximum of ten years overall.
* Disloyal or seriouscriminal conduct my limit an individual's ability to avail the benefit of the Convention
* Birth on a sea vessel or aircraft presumptively attacts the nationality of the flag of that vessel or craft for an otherwise stateless person
* Overtaking of territory by states presumptively confers the nationality of the overtaking state on the inhabitants of the territory. States must work together in treaty relations to eliminate the possibility of statelessness occurring by thecession of territories to each other.tatelessness since 1961
1961 marks the year from which the
UN proposed to exercise a mandate over stateless persons beyond the production oftravel document s upon request for them.In 1974, the
UN General Assembly requested theUNHCR to undertake the functions foreseen under the Reduction Convention.On 13 December 1975, the 1961 Convention entered into force. There is a poor level of uptake, with only 35 state
ratification s oraccession s in the period to February 2007. In 1995, the UNHCR Executive Committee(ExCom) and theUnited Nations General Assembly (UNGA) requestedUNHCR to broaden its activities concerning statelessness to include "all" states. The office was also asked to gather and share information on the problem of statelessness globally, to train staff and government officials, and to regularly report back to the ExCom.In 1996
UNHCR was asked by the UNGA to actively promoteaccession to the 1954 and the 1961 Conventions, as well as to provide relevant technical and advisory services pertaining to the preparation and implementation ofnationality legislation to interested states.Regional instruments, such as the
1997 European Convention on Nationality , have also contributed to protecting the rights of stateless persons. That document underlines the need of every person to have a nationality, and seeks to clarify the rights and responsibilities of states in ensuring individual access to a nationality.The
UNHCR has achieved some success in launching campaigns to prevent and reduce statelessness among formerly deported peoples in Crimea,Ukraine (Armenians ,Crimean Tatars ,Germans , andGreeks who were deported en masse at the close ofWorld War II ). [http://www.unhcr.org/research/RESEARCH/405ab4c74.pdf] Another success has been thenaturalization ofTajik refugees inKyrgyzstan , as well as the participation incitizenship campaigns enabling 300,000 Estate Tamils to acquirecitizenship ofSri Lanka . TheUNHCR also assisted theCzech Republic to overcome the large number of stateless persons created when it separated fromSlovakia .An internal evaluation released in 2001 suggested that
UNHCR had done little to exercise its mandate on statelessness. Only two individuals were tasked with overseeing work in that area atUNHCR headquarters, though field officers had been trained to address the issue. There was no dedicated budget line. Concerned organisations such as Refugees International have advocated for the appointment of a permanent UN Special Rapporteur of the Commission on Statelessness [ [http://www.refugeesinternational.org/section/publications/stateless_conc/ Refugees International: Publications: Stateless Report ] ]In 2004, ExCom invited
UNHCR to pay particular attention to situations of protracted statelessness and explore withstates measures that would ameliorate the situations and bring them to an end.At the beginning of 2006 the
UNHCR claimed to have 'on its books' 2.4 million stateless persons, and made an estimate of 11 million as the size of the stateless population worldwide. [ [http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/basics/opendoc.htm?tbl=BASICS&id=3b028097c UNHCR - Refugees by Numbers 2006 edition ] ]The greatest populations (over 100,000) of stateless persons are seen to be in the
Dominican Republic ,Ivory Coast , Congo,Syria ,Iraq ,Latvia andEstonia ,Nepal ,Bangladesh ,Burma ,Thailand ,Cambodia andMalaysia . Statelessness is adjudged to be least significant inNorth America ,Oceania ,North Africa ,Southern Africa , most ofSouth America , andChina . [ [http://www.unhcr.org/publ/PUBL/4538c8074.pdf UNCHR, Stateless Persons and Populations at Risk of Statelessness] ]Palestinians comprise the largest stateless population in the world.cite web|title=Stateless Limbo|author=Susan Akram|publisher=
Al-Ahram Weekly|date=|accessdate=21 - 27 August 2003|accessdate=2007-09-15|url=http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2003/652/re5.htm] Abbas Shiblak Shiblak estimates that over half of the Palestinian people in the world are stateless.cite journal|title=Reflections on the Palestinian Diaspora in Europe|author=Abbas Shiblak|journal="The Palestinian Diaspora in Europe: Challenges of Dual Identity and Adaptation"|publisher=Institute of Jerusalem Studies|isbn=9950315042|year=2005|url=http://www.rsc.ox.ac.uk/PDFs/Shiblak.pdf]Famous stateless individuals
*
John Demjanjuk , accused of being a guard at anextermination camp duringWorld War II .
*Mehran Karimi Nasseri , inspiration for "The Terminal ".References
ee also
*
Stateless person
*UNHCR
*1954 Convention Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons
*1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness
*Bidun
*Non-citizens (Latvia)
*Citizenship
*Nationality
*Office international Nansen pour les réfugiés
*Refugees andRefugee Law External links
* [http://untreaty.un.org/ilc/texts/instruments/english/conventions/6_1_1961.pdf Full Convention text of 1961 Convention]
* [http://www.unhcr.org/protect/PROTECTION/41b4790b4.pdf Map showing State Parties to 1961 Convention]
* [http://www.unhcr.org/protect/PROTECTION/45178f542.pdf Council of Europe Convention on Reduction of Statelessness in Relation to State Succession]
* [http://www.unhcr.org/publ/PUBL/4538c8074.pdf] UNHCR Map (21 August 2006) Stateless Persons and Populations at Risk of Statelessness
* [http://www.refugeesinternational.org/section/publications/stateless_review/ Refugees International 'Global Review of Statelessness']Further reading
* [http://www.fmreview.org/FMRpdfs/FMR26/FMR2603.pdf Stateless Palestinans]
* [http://www.state.gov/g/prm/rls/45288.htm Report describing US contributions to the resettlement of stateless populations in FY2004 and FY2005]
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