Chris Nash, Director of the European Network on Statelessness*
Since founding in 2014, strategic
litigation has always been a priority for the European Network on Statelessness
(ENS) and its members. As a former practising lawyer myself, I recognise that
part of the fight to end statelessness must happen through the courts. Recently
we added significant impetus to these efforts with the launch of our Statelessness Case Law Database.
Statelessness in Europe
Europe often likes to see itself
as a model of democracy and human rights. But it’s actually home to a
surprising number of stateless people – at least half a million in total - many
born in Europe itself but also more recent arrivals. By any yardstick, the
countries of Europe must do more to solve this solvable issue.
Yet statelessness is not a new
phenomenon. An international legal framework that guarantees protection to
stateless people and sets clear rules for preventing statelessness has been in
place for at least a generation. If all State signatories had translated this
into effective national law, the problem would have been eradicated in the
region by now. But identity politics, migration debates and questions about who
does and doesn’t belong have got in the way of this. State sovereignty and
national security have creeped in to take priority over collective
responsibility for human rights.
The importance of strategic litigation
Advocacy and awareness-raising to
hold governments to account in meeting their international obligations towards
stateless people is essential. However, as an isolated strategy this is
unlikely to bridge the current protection gap faced by stateless people across
Europe. Strategic litigation looks at the bigger picture by pursuing cases that
have the potential to set important precedents, influence policy, and ensure
that governments are carrying out their responsibilities. Yet, despite its
potential, strategic litigation can be challenging for relatively
under-resourced organisations. High-risk and resource-intensive, strategic
cases require specific legal expertise and often span many years, with no
guarantee of securing a positive outcome. At ENS we have been giving careful
thought about how best to garner greater momentum and impact with our strategic
litigation efforts.
The Statelessness Case Law Database
The Statelessness Case Law Database is
a key pillar of ENS’ strategy to increase the capacity and expertise of lawyers
in order to help bring about real change to the lives of stateless people and
contribute to the development of regional and national law and practice. It’s a
free online resource containing jurisprudence from jurisdictions across the
region as well as from the European Court of Human Rights, the Court of Justice
of the European Union and UN human rights treaty bodies. It is searchable by
country, legal instruments, key themes and keywords, and currently includes
over 180 case summaries.
We set up the database in direct
response to feedback from our members that this was the key tool they needed to
be able to support their work. They told us that being able to access relevant
case law from other countries or European and international bodies was vital to
assist and help stimulate their litigation efforts.
Promoting partnership
ENS’s resources are in some ways
limited – a relatively small Secretariat and limited funding – but in others
significant: over 170 members who, together, have a full picture of the legal
and social realities of statelessness across the continent. Yet without
sustained resourcing, a closely coordinated strategy and effective exchange of
information, litigation efforts risk becoming siloed and sporadic. The database
provides a dynamic and evolving tool to support strategic litigation while
ensuring effective and complementary use of available resources.
Another key function of the
database is to promote effective partnership and to engage a new generation of
lawyers motivated to work on statelessness. A key component of our litigation
strategy is to develop pro bono partnerships to help us maintain and develop
the database. We are excited to be working with several international law firms
– including Akin Gump Strauss Heuer & Feld LLP, DAC
Beachcroft, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, Skadden, Hogan Lovells
and DLA Piper, as well as our expert partner the AIRE Centre. Over time we
intend to further develop these partnerships, and to connect with lawyers
working on intersecting and nexus issues such as forced migration, child rights
and anti-discrimination.
Building a Europe where everyone has a nationality
At our database launch event
recently, we pulled together several prominent experts to debate how we can use
strategic litigation to end statelessness in Europe.
As Professor Guy S.
Goodwin-Gill pointed out during the debate, “providing for status is one
thing, a good thing, but the main challenge is in eliminating and reducing
statelessness”. As we celebrate the 60th anniversary of the 1961 Convention,
attending to the causes of statelessness will undoubtedly be key to address the
issue. With 95 States having acceded to the 1954 Convention and 76 to the 1961
Convention, considerable progress has been made in signing these treaties but
“States’ record at the moment is still patchy, and a considerable amount of
effort will be required among all of us to push them ahead”. After overviewing
ECtHR jurisprudence on statelessness, judge Zalar similarly noted, “to put it
simply, these judgments are relevant for judges because this is law, but the
more relevant question is why these human rights violations happen so often,
and why do we not learn from our mistakes?”. Hence it is crucial to continue
increasing knowledge of international and human rights law in order to ensure
the effective implementation of regional judgments at the national level, and
the database is a tool that may assist in sustaining this progress.
As observed by Nuala Mole from
the AIRE Centre, litigating statelessness requires a touch of creativity, and
the Strasbourg court has shown that by introducing statelessness in the ECHR
through the prism of the right to private life such as in the recent landmark
ruling in Hoti
v Croatia. Critical principles with regard to the right to private
life are also at stake due to recent trends in States’ practices on deprivation
of nationality, which considerably impact on children and stateless persons.
Finally, as articulated by Laura Bingham from the Open Society Justice
Initiative, if we ever needed a reminder of the importance of strategic
litigation we need to look no further than the Human Rights Committee’s
decision in Zhao v. Netherlands,
both for Denny Zhao and for stateless children across Europe and globally. As
Laura noted, “the database gives the legal community and the broader community
a sense of identity and connectedness that is not there without a tool like
this”.
Watch the recording of
the online debate.
The way forward – our strategy
Ultimately, our approach is
cognisant of the fact that statelessness in Europe is exacerbated by States’
failure to live up to commitments they have made at international and European
levels to respect the rights of stateless people, as well as by a lack of
clarity in how those commitments should be implemented in line with
international and human rights law. These are gaps that the courts are well
positioned to address.
Any litigation strategy makes the
assumption that the rule of law is strong enough to guarantee implementation of
judgments. But the stateless are among the most marginalised in society.
Hence, even where favourable court judgments are achieved, it is imperative to
continue to fight alongside stateless people to make sure that their rights are
respected in practice. There is a limit to what lawyers can do alone, and
ENS is well set up for this further fight, as our membership also includes
community activists, researchers, and communications specialists.
We do not pretend that a few
high-profile judgments will solve statelessness in Europe. But we know
that without litigation we will not meet our change objectives. Armed
with our database and a growing network of lawyers litigating on statelessness,
we are determined to achieve further judicial landmarks over the coming years,
around which we will build a future Europe where everyone has a nationality.
*Reblogged from the ENS
website
Photo credit: Keiran Lynam, via Wikimedia
Commons
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete