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Recovering from statelessness: Resettled Bhutanese-Nepali and Karen refugees reflect on the lack of legal nationality
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2015
Year
Human MigrationNationalismColonialismEast Asian StudiesGlobal MigrationKaren RefugeesSocial SciencesForced MigrationRefugee StatusAfrican American StudiesQualitative Research InterviewsLanguage StudiesMigration PolicyRefugee StudiesPopulation DisplacementHuman RightsHuman Rights LawCultureLegal NationalityAnthropologyRefugee HealthHuman Rights ViolationRefugee MovementSocial Justice
The very notion of international human rights relies on state governments to serve as the legal "duty bearers" for protecting rights, yet governments are often responsible for creating the conditions that necessitate mass displacement. For some refugees, the lack of legal nationality creates an added dimension of vulnerability that exacerbates suffering. In order to illustrate the human rights challenges inherent to statelessness, this article focuses on the lived experiences of 30 formerly stateless refugees who have been resettled to the United States. Qualitative research interviews with 15 Bhutanese-Nepalis and 15 members of the Karen ethnic minority (from Burma and Thailand), all currently resettled in the United States, provide insights into the everyday realities of stateless individuals. In both cases, statelessness represented a human rights violation in itself as well as a contributing factor for further abuses related to recognition and membership, denied education, and serious impediments to employment and livelihoods.
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