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Stateless person definition

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Key points
  • Asylum seekers, refugees, IDPs and migrants may also be stateless. Identification of stateless people is therefore important both in the context of cross-border flows and in IDP situations.
  • Take steps to identify and flag asylum seekers who are potentially stateless at the registration stage.
  • Bear in mind that most stateless persons have never crossed a border and find themselves in their ‘own country’. Their predicament exists in situ, that is, in the country of their long-term residence, in many cases the country of their birth. For these individuals, statelessness is often the result of problems in the framing and implementation of national laws.
  • In the case of stateless refugees, it is important that both their refugee and statelessness status are explicitly recognized. In emergency settings, however, it is important to prioritize the recognition of a person’s refugee status, unless authorities in the country examine refugee and statelessness in parallel. In the post-emergency phase, efforts can focus on supporting authorities in recognizing stateless status and establishing statelessness determination procedures where relevant.
  • Always bear in mind that cross-border flows may include nationals of the receiving country. Where such individuals are not able to confirm and document their nationality, facilitate their timely identification and assist them to be recognized and documented as nationals by the relevant authorities.
  • To prevent risks of statelessness among displaced populations, UNHCR should promote access to civil registration services, including by advocating with relevant authorities to address barriers to civil registration.

Post emergency phase

With respect to individual determinations of whether a person is stateless under the definition in Article 1(1) of the 1954 Convention, UNHCR's primary role is to provide technical assistance to States in identifying stateless persons and – where appropriate - establishing statelessness determination procedures (SDPs). UNHCR can advise on both the establishment of new SDPs to be conducted by States and contribute to the enhancement of existing ones. UNHCR may also support States in establishing whether or not a person is stateless by facilitating enquiries with authorities of other States and can act as an information resource on nationality laws and practices. Under Article 11 of the 1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness (1961 Convention), UNHCR can play a role in examining a person's nationality claims and presenting them to the appropriate State authority.

It should be noted that SDPs are only relevant procedures for stateless migrants or stateless refugees and not for in situ stateless persons. SDPs for the purpose of obtaining status as stateless persons are not optimal because of their long-established ties to these countries. Depending on the circumstances of these populations, States are encouraged to undertake targeted nationality campaigns or nationality verification efforts rather than to establish statelessness status through use of an SDP.

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