Total population | |
---|---|
4.4 million[1] (2022, est.) | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Bangladesh | 952,300 registered[1] |
Côte d'Ivoire | 931,100 registered[1] |
Myanmar | 630,000 registered[1] |
Thailand | 574,200 registered[1] |
Legal status of persons |
---|
Birthright |
Nationality |
Immigration |
In international law, a stateless person is someone who is "not considered as a national by any state under the operation of its law".[2] Some stateless people are also refugees. However, not all refugees are stateless, and many people who are stateless have never crossed an international border.[3] At the end of 2022, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees estimated 4.4 million people worldwide as either stateless or of undetermined nationality, 90,800 (+2%) more than at the end of 2021.
The status of a person who might be stateless ultimately depends on the viewpoint of the state with respect to the individual or a group of people. In some cases, the state makes its view clear and explicit; in others, its viewpoint is harder to discern. In those cases, one may need to rely on prima facie evidence of the view of the state, which in turn may give rise to a presumption of statelessness.[4]
People who reside in their country of birth, have never crossed a border, but have never had their birth registered by the state—the effectively stateless, in Jacqueline Bhabha's terminology—also resemble refugees in their relative rightlessness.
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