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Showing papers on "Statelessness published in 1998"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The right to a nationality is a human right, in turn, out to serve as a basis upon which to settie issues pertaining to the acquisition, loss, or denial of nationality as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: 'Everyone has the right to a nationality. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his nationality, nor denied die right to change his nationality.' Such is the text of article 15 of die 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This has not always been die case. The right to a nationality and die notion of'effective nationality', of nationality as a basis for the exercise of odier rights, have been developed through the course of this century. Notable landmarks include die 1930 Hague Convention on Certain Questions relating to die Conflict of Nationality Laws, die 1961 Convention on die Reduction of Statelessness, and die 1997 European Convention on Nationality. The principles contained in diese conventions have been elaborated upon and reinforced by other treaties, jurisprudence, and State practice. The right to a nationality is a human right, in turn, out to serve as a basis upon which to settie issues pertaining to the acquisition, loss, or denial of nationality. If everyone has die right to a nationality, how is tiiis right to be realized, how is nationality to be ascribed? International law stipulates tiiat it is for each State to determine, dirough die operation of national law, who are its citizens. This determination will be recognized at the international level so far as it accords widi general principles of international law. The State, dierefore, should not apply measures which conflict witii international principles relating to the acquisition, loss, or denial of citizenship. This principle is enunciated in the 1930 Hague Convention, die 1997 European Convention, and die case law of bodi die Permanent Court of International Justice and International Court of Justice.

58 citations




Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A decade ago, the political geographer John Agnew developed in the book Place and Politics (1987a) a provocative theory of place in the social sciences as mentioned in this paper, drawing empirical material from the electoral geography of both the United States and Scotland, Agnew sought to elevate place into a fundamental social science concept.
Abstract: A decade ago the political geographer John Agnew developed in the book Place and Politics (1987a) a provocative theory of place in the social sciences. Drawing empirical material from the electoral geography of both the United States and Scotland, Agnew sought to elevate place into a fundamental social science concept. This task, ambitiously and creatively undertaken and supported by careful political analysis of the two nations, was Agnew's effort to reconcile the statism prevalent in contemporary political inquiry with the conceptual challenge of spatial relations increasingly prominent in the work of geographers.

1 citations


Dissertation
01 Jan 1998

1 citations