Statelessness

In international law, a stateless person is someone who is "not considered as a national by any state under the operation of its law". Some stateless people are also refugees. However, not all refugees are stateless, and many people who are stateless have never crossed an international border. On November 12, 2018, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees stated there are about 12 million stateless people in the world.

Wikipedia

Publications

The National Archives · 1965 German

A file of correspondence and legal documentation concerning compensation claims against West Germany. The documents cover the case of a naturalised British citizen, Herbert Muhlstein, who is seeking to gain …

appears to depend entirely on the question of statelessness - although Article 160 (ii) states that persecutees grounds of insufficient proof of the father's statelessness. The odd point about this is that when the having left Poland to settle abroad, implies statelessness in any legal sense. 3. I am sending a copy


The National Archives · 1959 English

A file containing documents concerning financial claims against the Soviet Union and the Baltic states. The file includes a report from the Treasury Chambers about financial claims by Western European …

Conference of Plenipotentiaries on Reduction of Statelessness, he will instruct the United Kingdom delegates


The National Archives · 1957 English

Turkish passports and given "certificates of statelessness". Only in very few cases have they been granted


The National Archives · 1954 English

A file of correspondence concerning Jews in Romania. The documents discuss the nature of Jewish re-immigration into Romania from Israel, with a large number having recently returned on grounds of …

protecting minorities and refugees, eliminating statelessness, providing for the full enjoyment of trade of Asylum, Migration, Rights of Minorities, Statelessness, Welfare of Survivors of Nazi Concentration presented to the United Nations on problems of statelessness refugees, religious rights, minority protection


The National Archives · 21 October 1942 English

-2- The chief argument against compulsion is the fear entertained by the Foreign Office that Germany and other enemy states might start reprisals against British subjects now in their countries. …


The National Archives · 1 January 1942 English



The National Archives · 25 October 1928 English

WRD/LP Office open to the Public from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. (1.0 p.m. on Saturdays.) 131 Telegrams :—Enemidets, ### London. Wetloo THE CLEARING OFFICE (ENEMY DEBTS), Telephone ;— HOP …

release of certain property on the ground of her statelessness. 2. In that note His Excellency further developed



The National Archives · 4 September 1928 German

release of oertain property on the ground of statelessness, I am directed by lord Cachendun to transmit


View more