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Underreported: Statelessness

Thursday, May 11, 2006

The refugee and stateless crisis experienced in the wake of WWII led to the formal recognition of the right to nationality by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. But now, nearly 50 years later, an estimated 11 million people are suffering from statelessness—without the right to participate in politics, move freely, find employment, or gain access to education. On this week’s Underreported, we’ll study the fundamental rights associated with citizenship, and find out why racial and ethnic minorities from Kenya to the Dominican Republic are being denied citizenship in their own countries. Julia Harrington, the Open Society Justice Initiative's Senior Legal Officer for Equality and Citizenship, joins us along with a man and a woman who have firsthand experience with the hardships of statelessness: Adam Hussein Adam from Kenya, and Naw Htoo Paw who fled from Burma to Thailand in 2001.


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