Full Description
This book discusses the fundamental issues of public law in the area of statelessness from the perspectives of comparative law and international law standards. The author proposes an approach in which statelessness is not a homogeneous concept but is best analysed and responded to through the lens of different categories of statelessness. This accounts not only for the existence of different categories of stateless persons (e.g., voluntary or involuntary) but also for different assessments and needs of their respective situations for purposes such as prevention mechanisms. The book demonstrates the conceptual and regulatory relevance of this important differential aspect of the international law on statelessness (with implications for domestic legal systems).
Contents
Chapter I Statelessness: Introduction to the Problem - Chapter II Defining the Stateless Person - Chapter III Counteracting Statelessness - Chapter IV Protection of Stateless Persons; Statelessness - Determination Procedures - Chapter V The Category of 'Women' in the Law of Statelessness - Chapter VI The Category of 'Children' in the Law of Statelessness - Chapter VII The Category of Individuals Distinguished on the Grounds of Public Interest - Chapter VIII The Category of Individuals Distinguished on Account of 'Voluntarity'