Menu

News & Events

16 Dec 2022
Exploring the Nexus Between Poverty, Human Rights, and Statelessness in Cambodia
TAGS

Poverty, human rights, and statelessness interrelate with one another to varying degrees. Underlying the dynamics of this relationship is a functioning CRVS system, particularly birth and marriage registration, and national identification. Governments and development partners in Asia and the Pacific recognize the importance of birth registration in ensuring people’s access to basic services and lifting them out of poverty. As a result, they have committed to achieving universal birth registration and realizing all goals by the end of the Asia-Pacific CRVS Decade 2015-2024. It is therefore important to develop a better understanding of this ecosystem to design effective policies for improved service delivery to affected populations.

Raoul Wallenberg Institute (RWI), with funding support from the Government of Sweden, hosted a workshop on 16th December 2022 to explore the nexus between poverty, human rights, and statelessness in Cambodia. The workshop provided a platform for academia, development partners, and representatives from civil society organizations to share experiences from their work and deepen discussion on the interrelationship, including ways forward for Cambodia. Experts and researchers presented findings from the RWI-supported pilot research at two panels on enabling international frameworks and national policies and regulations. They also shared preliminary findings from their fieldwork to affected communities in six provinces in Cambodia.

The study identifies the challenges that ethnic Vietnamese and Khmer Krom face without legal identification and highlights the need for more support. Panelists and participants emphasized the links between birth registration, social inclusion, and access to public services. They also discussed the process of issuing new permanent residence cards as part of implementing the National Strategic Identification Plan 2015-2026, and the progress made by the Royal Government of Cambodia in developing the draft Law on CRVS and Identification.

Please visit this link for more information.

More News

18 January 2018

On the 18th and 19th of January 2018 the third meeting of the Bali Process Civil Registration…

12 January 2018

The Vietnamese government has included CRVS improvements as an integral part of the National Action…

11 January 2018

19 island countries in the Pacific are working together to build a single civil registration…

05 January 2018

A CRVS Knowledge Gateway (www.crvsgateway.info) has been launched. The Gateway…

13 December 2017

New Zealand has introduced a new online marriage registration service designed to make…

13 December 2017

The draft Action Plan of the National Strategy for Registration of Civil Status Acts and Statistics…

05 January 2018

The Brisbane Accord Group (BAG), led by SPC, WHO, the Queensland University of Technology (QUT…

04 December 2017

The Brisbane Accord Group (BAG), led by SPC, WHO, the Queensland University of Technology (QUT),…

31 October 2017

The World Bank Group’s Identification for Development (ID4D) High-level Advisory Council held…

31 October 2017

A new publication highlighting good practices in identity management was launched at an event in…