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Ministerial Meeting

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Historic Gathering in Geneva

UNHCR organized a highly successful ministerial meeting in Geneva on December 7-8, 2011 to mark the 60th anniversary of the 1951 Refugee Convention and the 50th anniversary of the 1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness. The landmark gathering was attended by representatives of 155 UN member states, including 72 ministers. Special guests included United States Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, Kenya's Minister of State for Immigration and Registration Gerald Otieno Kajwan'g, Swiss President Micheline Calmy-Rey and Nobel peace laureate and former Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari.

An impressive 62 states presented written pledges in the run-up to the event and many others announced pledges during the meeting or made joint pledges with other countries. Many pledges related to protection, assistance and durable solutions for refugees, including resettlement and local integration - long considered a taboo subject by states that have been hosting refugees for decades.

But the biggest breakthrough related to statelessness, which affects up to 12 million people. The two main international treaties on statelessness - the 1961 Convention and the 1954 Convention relating to the Status of Stateless Persons - have long been under-subscribed, but eight states acceded to one or other of the conventions in 2011, bringing the number of states party to the 1954 and 1961 Conventions to 70 and 42 respectively.

At the ministerial meeting, another 20 states pledged to accede to one or both of the statelessness instruments while a further 25 states made pledges related to statelessness. Notable pledges included reforming nationality laws to bring an end to gender discrimination, thereby enabling women to transmit their nationalities to children. Secretary of State Clinton said the US would launch an initiative to build global awareness and action on these issues.

States also undertook to adopt procedures for determining who is stateless on their territories, improving civil registration systems, and undertaking surveys or awareness campaigns to determine the number of stateless people, and raise awareness about options which may be open to them, including acquiring citizenship.

A Ministerial Communiqué was issued at the end of the meeting, which reaffirmed that the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 Protocol are the foundation of the international refugee protection regime and have enduring value and relevance in the 21st Century.

State Pledges

A compilation and analysis of pledges submitted during the 2011 ministerial process.

Meeting Documents Rss FeedMeeting Documents

Documents for the ministerial-level meeting held in Geneva on December 7-8, 2011.
Also available in French on www.unhcr.fr. Arabic, Chinese, Russian and Spanish versions available for download here (zipped MS Word files, 180Kb).

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Ministerial Communiqué

Adopted at the ministerial meeting held in Geneva on 7-8 December 2011. Also available in French on www.unhcr.fr. Arabic, Chinese, Russian and Spanish versions available for download here (zipped pdf files, 293Kb).

Keynote Speeches

Statements delivered during the Ministerial event

Download the collection of statements (zipped file, 74.7 MB).

UNHCR Ministerial Meeting 2011Play video

UNHCR Ministerial Meeting 2011

A report from the morning session 7 December 2011
Survivors, Protectors, Providers: Refugee Women speak OutPlay video

Survivors, Protectors, Providers: Refugee Women speak Out

Women and girls from around the world share their experiences of sacrifice and inspiration.

Related News Rss FeedRelated News

more documents

Regional Dialogues with Women and Girls

More than 1,000 refugee and displaced women and girls shared their stories in a series of seven Dialogues around the world.

Media and Background Material

This page is a dedicated resource for journalists and news organizations interested in covering this event.

Stateless People

Millions of stateless people are left in a legal limbo, with limited basic rights.