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Advocacy campaigns and policy development

For more than twenty years activists have produced declarations that implicitly link statelessness to the challenges of providing human security and promoting dignity, thus bringing it inside the human rights regime; for example, in 1986 the Declaration on the Right…

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Reducing de facto statelessness in Nepal

From 1951, Nepal granted citizenship on the basis of a person’s birthplace and descent. Naturalisation was possible for those who had been resident in the country for at least five years. A decade later, however, the provisions relating to naturalisation…

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The end of Bihari statelessness

The people known in Bangladesh as ‘Biharis’ or ‘stranded Pakistanis’ are the Urdu-speaking descendants of Muslims who lived in the different Indian provinces and most of from  Bihar and who, at India’s partition in 1947, moved to what became East…

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The Universal Birth Registration campaign

“…it’s a small paper but it actually establishes who you are and gives access to the rights and the privileges, and the obligations, of citizenship.” Archbishop Desmond Tutu, launching Plan’s Universal Birth Registration campaign, February 2005[1]   Registration means proof…

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The legal limbo of detention

Physical restriction, including prolonged or indefinite detention, of those who have no effective nationality is increasingly common around the world.[1] Preliminary analysis of available research suggests that practically all types of stateless persons may be at risk of arbitrary detention.…

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We have no soil under our feet

In the muddy setting of an overcrowded camp in Bangladesh, Jhora Shama[1] tells me her story. Jhora is an unregistered refugee, a Rohingya, who has been living illegally in Bangladesh for 16 years. She fled to Bangladesh from Arakan [Rakhine]…

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Kenyan Nubians: standing up to statelessness

Kenyan Nubians have been defined as stateless people because their identity is questioned. They are without doubt one of the country’s most invisible and under-represented communities – economically, socially, politically and culturally. This is because they have been silent victims…

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