This book addresses a critical gap in existing scholarship by examining statelessness through the prism of international refugee law, in particular by examining the extent to which the 1951 Refugee Convention protects de jure stateless persons. It responds to the need for a coherent and inclusive legal framework to address the plight of stateless individuals who fear persecution. The central hypothesis of this book is that the capacity and potential of the 1951 Refugee Convention to protect stateless persons has been inadequately developed and understood. This is particularly so when we consider the significant transformation that has occurred over the past 60 years in delimiting state discretion in matters of nationality, including in rela...
A refugee leaves the country of his or her national origin because the political community will not ...
This thesis examines complementary protection the protection afforded by States to persons who fall...
In the paper the author attempts to describe the issue of refugees as a very important problem in in...
The 1951 Convention/1967 Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees provides opportunities for stat...
This chapter focuses on ‘Who is a stateless refugee?’, hence it examines the relevance of the Refuge...
In customary international law, nationality provides the principal link between the individual and t...
The question of whether arbitrary deprivation of nationality constitutes persecution for the purpose...
Copyright © British Institute of International and Comparative Law 2014. The question of whether arb...
The protection of stateless persons has long been understood as a challenge for the international co...
The treatment of non-refugee stateless persons varies greatly across the States of the European Unio...
How does international law protect migrants? For the most part, it does not. Of the millions of peop...
The paper is part of a wider research project which seeks to explore the nexus between statelessness...
The Convention relating to the Status of Refugees 1951 ("the Convention") is over fifty ye...
The origins of refugee rights are closely intertwined with the emergence of the general system of in...
Statelessness is the absence of the right to have a legal connection between nationality and state. ...
A refugee leaves the country of his or her national origin because the political community will not ...
This thesis examines complementary protection the protection afforded by States to persons who fall...
In the paper the author attempts to describe the issue of refugees as a very important problem in in...
The 1951 Convention/1967 Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees provides opportunities for stat...
This chapter focuses on ‘Who is a stateless refugee?’, hence it examines the relevance of the Refuge...
In customary international law, nationality provides the principal link between the individual and t...
The question of whether arbitrary deprivation of nationality constitutes persecution for the purpose...
Copyright © British Institute of International and Comparative Law 2014. The question of whether arb...
The protection of stateless persons has long been understood as a challenge for the international co...
The treatment of non-refugee stateless persons varies greatly across the States of the European Unio...
How does international law protect migrants? For the most part, it does not. Of the millions of peop...
The paper is part of a wider research project which seeks to explore the nexus between statelessness...
The Convention relating to the Status of Refugees 1951 ("the Convention") is over fifty ye...
The origins of refugee rights are closely intertwined with the emergence of the general system of in...
Statelessness is the absence of the right to have a legal connection between nationality and state. ...
A refugee leaves the country of his or her national origin because the political community will not ...
This thesis examines complementary protection the protection afforded by States to persons who fall...
In the paper the author attempts to describe the issue of refugees as a very important problem in in...