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Undocumented and Invisible: Are SADC Member States Implementing the Rights to Birth Registration and Nationality for Migrant Children?

The Southern African Development Community sees high levels of migration. Many children within these groups are undocumented and have no means to prove their identities. This greatly increases their risks of statelessness, which opens the way to abuse, exploitation, trafficking, and the inability to...

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Main Author: Fortuin, Rowan Victor
Other Authors: Lutchman, Salona
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Public Law 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Fortuin, Rowan Victor
author2 Lutchman, Salona
author_browse Fortuin, Rowan Victor
Lutchman, Salona
author_facet Lutchman, Salona
Fortuin, Rowan Victor
author_sort Fortuin, Rowan Victor
collection Thesis
description The Southern African Development Community sees high levels of migration. Many children within these groups are undocumented and have no means to prove their identities. This greatly increases their risks of statelessness, which opens the way to abuse, exploitation, trafficking, and the inability to claim their human rights. Birth registration represents one of the main protections undocumented children have in avoiding statelessness, as this reduces their chances of abuse, as well as provides them with a better chance of accessing nationality. Providing nationality is also important in reducing statelessness, as birth registration is not enough on its own. Therefore, whether birth registration and nationality are available for undocumented migrants in SADC member states is examined within both the international and regional legal contexts. International human rights treaties go a long way in providing rights to birth registration and nationality, but the scope of these rights is not infinite. International law takes a strong stance on birth registration, as it is provided in many of the main treaties, as well as the fact that it is linked to the best interests of the child principle. The right to nationality on the other hand is generally understood to have restrictive application in that migrants do not have the right to the nationality of the host state, a state must just ensure that a child has the right to “a” nationality. This reduces the ambit of protection. In turning to the SADC, the region in general was found to have a number of barriers to birth registration and nationality. For birth registration, gender discriminatory laws, centralised organisational structures, the COVID-19 lockdown, and penalties for late registration were counted as among the leading barriers to registration. This was similarly the case for South Africa and Zambia which were two key country profiles analysed. For nationality, there were many gaps in protection, such as uneven protection for foundlings and children who would otherwise be stateless, as well as onerous barriers to naturalisation. Given these findings, this dissertation concluded that SADC members are not adequately giving effect to their international obligations
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:53:12.002Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/36626 Undocumented and Invisible: Are SADC Member States Implementing the Rights to Birth Registration and Nationality for Migrant Children? Fortuin, Rowan Victor Lutchman, Salona Public International Law The Southern African Development Community sees high levels of migration. Many children within these groups are undocumented and have no means to prove their identities. This greatly increases their risks of statelessness, which opens the way to abuse, exploitation, trafficking, and the inability to claim their human rights. Birth registration represents one of the main protections undocumented children have in avoiding statelessness, as this reduces their chances of abuse, as well as provides them with a better chance of accessing nationality. Providing nationality is also important in reducing statelessness, as birth registration is not enough on its own. Therefore, whether birth registration and nationality are available for undocumented migrants in SADC member states is examined within both the international and regional legal contexts. International human rights treaties go a long way in providing rights to birth registration and nationality, but the scope of these rights is not infinite. International law takes a strong stance on birth registration, as it is provided in many of the main treaties, as well as the fact that it is linked to the best interests of the child principle. The right to nationality on the other hand is generally understood to have restrictive application in that migrants do not have the right to the nationality of the host state, a state must just ensure that a child has the right to “a” nationality. This reduces the ambit of protection. In turning to the SADC, the region in general was found to have a number of barriers to birth registration and nationality. For birth registration, gender discriminatory laws, centralised organisational structures, the COVID-19 lockdown, and penalties for late registration were counted as among the leading barriers to registration. This was similarly the case for South Africa and Zambia which were two key country profiles analysed. For nationality, there were many gaps in protection, such as uneven protection for foundlings and children who would otherwise be stateless, as well as onerous barriers to naturalisation. Given these findings, this dissertation concluded that SADC members are not adequately giving effect to their international obligations 2022-07-08T02:12:08Z 2022-07-08T02:12:08Z 2022 2022-07-08T02:10:43Z Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36626 eng application/pdf Department of Public Law Faculty of Law
spellingShingle Public International Law
Fortuin, Rowan Victor
Undocumented and Invisible: Are SADC Member States Implementing the Rights to Birth Registration and Nationality for Migrant Children?
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Undocumented and Invisible: Are SADC Member States Implementing the Rights to Birth Registration and Nationality for Migrant Children?
title_full Undocumented and Invisible: Are SADC Member States Implementing the Rights to Birth Registration and Nationality for Migrant Children?
title_fullStr Undocumented and Invisible: Are SADC Member States Implementing the Rights to Birth Registration and Nationality for Migrant Children?
title_full_unstemmed Undocumented and Invisible: Are SADC Member States Implementing the Rights to Birth Registration and Nationality for Migrant Children?
title_short Undocumented and Invisible: Are SADC Member States Implementing the Rights to Birth Registration and Nationality for Migrant Children?
title_sort undocumented and invisible are sadc member states implementing the rights to birth registration and nationality for migrant children
topic Public International Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36626
work_keys_str_mv AT fortuinrowanvictor undocumentedandinvisiblearesadcmemberstatesimplementingtherightstobirthregistrationandnationalityformigrantchildren