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Urge Congress to Pass Legislation that Affirms the Dignity of Stateless Persons
Justice for Immigrants | Stuart Center

 

Urge Congress to Pass Legislation that Affirms the Dignity of Stateless Persons 

The United Nations estimates that there are millions of people across the globe who do not have a nationality and are therefore stateless. According to international law, as ratified in the 1954 Convention Related to the Status of Stateless Persons, a stateless person is one “who is not considered as a national by any state under the operation of its law”. Consequences of statelessness can include a lack of legal protection, limited or no access to health care, education, and registration of birth, infringements on the rights to marry and own property, an inability to travel, and an increased vulnerability to human trafficking.

In March 2024, Representative Jamie Raskin and Senator Ben Cardin reintroduced the “Stateless Protection Act of 2024”, which would address statelessness in federal law for the first time in U.S. history.  The bill would:

  • Adopt the international law definition of “stateless person”, thus providing a definition of statelessness for the first time is U.S. law; 
  • Afford protection to stateless persons present in the United States through a new form of relief and path to permanent residency known as Stateless Protected Status; 
  • Promote education and research on statelessness through partnerships with universities, international organizations, and nongovernmental organizations; and 
  • Encourage engagement with other countries to establish stateless status determination and protection legislation.
     

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB) Committee on Migration and Committee on International Justice and Peace formally endorsed the bill in July. The committees affirmed the political right to a nationality, stating, “motivated by our belief that each person is endowed by God with an inherent dignity that confers certain ‘universal, inviolable, and inalienable’ rights, the USCCB is deeply concerned for those who have been deprived of the most basic of political rights—their national identity.” Their comments echo those of the Holy Father in his 2018 message on the World Day of Migrants and Refugees. On that occasion, Pope Francis discussed statelessness and encouraged world leaders to adopt “nationality legislation that is in conformity with the fundamental principles of international law.”

 

Message to your Senators and Member of Congress

Please Address the Injustice of Statelessness 

As a Catholic and your constituent, I urge you to support the Stateless Protection Act of 2024 (S.3987/H.R. 7755), an important and historic bill that would acknowledge and define the plight of stateless people for the first time in U.S. law.  

Stateless people experience what the U.S. Supreme Court called in Trop v. Dulles “a form of punishment more primitive than torture.” A person may be or become stateless for a variety of reasons, including deprivation of citizenship in times of war, persecution or discrimination, or administrative prohibitions on mothers passing citizenship onto their children. 

A salient example of statelessness today is its use as a punitive tool by the Nicaraguan government. There, Catholic clergy and laypersons have specifically been persecuted by the state and stripped of their citizenship.  

Your support of the Stateless Protection Act is crucial to advance the fundamental right of each person to a nationality and the opportunities it provides for full participation in society.

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