The 1951 Convention/1967 Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees provides opportunities for stateless persons to be recognized as refugees. My presentation will examine whether discrimination and arbitrary deprivation of nationality, either on its own or when taken with other forms of harm, amounts to persecution for the purpose of Article 1A(2) of the Refugee Convention in the jurisprudence of national and international courts worldwide. This is an important question because the absence of determination procedures and a protection regime specifically for stateless persons in many jurisdictions makes refugee and/or complementary protection the only options
This thesis examines complementary protection the protection afforded by States to persons who fall...
This thesis examines the use by States of the 'changed circumstances' cessation provision in Article...
States are routinely confronted with conflicting duties of maintaining full respect for human rights...
The 1951 Convention/1967 Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees provides opportunities for stat...
The question of whether arbitrary deprivation of nationality constitutes persecution for the purpose...
The question of whether arbitrary deprivation of nationality constitutes persecution for the purpose...
This book addresses a critical gap in existing scholarship by examining statelessness through the pr...
This chapter focuses on ‘Who is a stateless refugee?’, hence it examines the relevance of the Refuge...
The purpose of this paper is to discuss some of the provisions of Draft Articles on diplomatic prote...
The treatment of non-refugee stateless persons varies greatly across the States of the European Unio...
A number of jurisdictions have fastened onto a solution that appears to reconcile respect for refu...
The 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees [hereinafter "1951 Convention"] is the center...
The Convention relating to the Status of Refugees 1951 ("the Convention") is over fifty ye...
he twenty first century has witnessed disastrous events in different parts of the world causing mill...
The major international instrument providing asylum to refugees is the 1951 Convention relating to t...
This thesis examines complementary protection the protection afforded by States to persons who fall...
This thesis examines the use by States of the 'changed circumstances' cessation provision in Article...
States are routinely confronted with conflicting duties of maintaining full respect for human rights...
The 1951 Convention/1967 Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees provides opportunities for stat...
The question of whether arbitrary deprivation of nationality constitutes persecution for the purpose...
The question of whether arbitrary deprivation of nationality constitutes persecution for the purpose...
This book addresses a critical gap in existing scholarship by examining statelessness through the pr...
This chapter focuses on ‘Who is a stateless refugee?’, hence it examines the relevance of the Refuge...
The purpose of this paper is to discuss some of the provisions of Draft Articles on diplomatic prote...
The treatment of non-refugee stateless persons varies greatly across the States of the European Unio...
A number of jurisdictions have fastened onto a solution that appears to reconcile respect for refu...
The 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees [hereinafter "1951 Convention"] is the center...
The Convention relating to the Status of Refugees 1951 ("the Convention") is over fifty ye...
he twenty first century has witnessed disastrous events in different parts of the world causing mill...
The major international instrument providing asylum to refugees is the 1951 Convention relating to t...
This thesis examines complementary protection the protection afforded by States to persons who fall...
This thesis examines the use by States of the 'changed circumstances' cessation provision in Article...
States are routinely confronted with conflicting duties of maintaining full respect for human rights...