Stateless Indigenous People(s): The Right to a Nationality, Including Their Own

According to the 2007 UN Declaration on the Right of Indigenous Peoples, every indigenous individual has the right to a nationality. The present paper focuses on the right to a nationality as a ‘gateway’ to the recognition of a plurality of other rights. Doing so, two issues are given special attent...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Willem van Genugten, Anna Meijknecht, Bas Rombouts
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2014-01-01
Series:Tilburg Law Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tilburglawreview.com/articles/59
Description
Summary:According to the 2007 UN Declaration on the Right of Indigenous Peoples, every indigenous individual has the right to a nationality. The present paper focuses on the right to a nationality as a ‘gateway’ to the recognition of a plurality of other rights. Doing so, two issues are given special attention: 1) the lack of adequate birth registration and the consequences of this ‘false start’ for other rights, such as, again, the right to a nationality. 2) The recognition of indigenous identity papers: while regularly Indigenous Peoples do not want to establish an independent sovereign State, many of them strive for the recognition of their own Indigenous identity papers. The paper discusses some of the advantages and consequences thereof.
ISSN:2211-2545