“Everyone has the right to a nationality”

It’s time to end the arbitrary detention of stateless people in Europe

Statelessness increases vulnerability to arbitrary arrest and detention.

Building for impact - Our 2016 Annual Report

Read our 2016 Annual Report, which maps the continuing development of our Network as a catalyst for increased civil society action to tackle statelessness in Europe.

#STATELESSKIDS - Help us end childhood statelessness in Europe

See how we work to prevent children from growing up without a nationality.

Still Stateless Still Suffering

Why Europe Must Act Now to Protect Stateless Persons!

Faces of statelessness

Read the stories of 6 individuals who've found themselves stateless living in Europe.

It’s time to end the arbitrary detention of stateless people in Europe
Building for impact - Our 2016 Annual Report
#STATELESSKIDS - Help us end childhood statelessness in Europe
Still Stateless Still Suffering
Faces of statelessness

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Statelessness affects more than 10 million people around the world and at least 600,000 in Europe alone. To be stateless is to not be recognized as a citizen by any state. It is a legal anomaly that often prevents people from accessing fundamental civil, political, economic, cultural and social rights.

The European Network on Statelessness is a civil society alliance committed to address statelessness in Europe. We believe that all human beings have a right to a nationality and that those who lack nationality altogether are entitled to full protection of their human rights.

In Europe, statelessness occurs both among recent migrants and among people who have lived in the same place for generations. Most countries in the region frequently encounter stateless persons in their asylum systems. In the Balkans and elsewhere many Roma remain stateless as a result of ethnic discrimination. Statelessness is also a continuing reminder of the break-up of the Soviet Union.

Despite the scale of the problem, most European countries have no framework to effectively deal with statelessness and tackling this requires major law and policy reform. The European Network on Statelessness is dedicated to strengthening the often unheard voice of stateless persons in Europe and to advocate for full respect of their human rights.

  • Too often, stateless people

    lead invisible lives – more must be done to identify this vulnerable population

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