27 Sep 2024
No identity, no protection: How lack of identity documents drives exploitation and modern slavery
TAGS

The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Target 16.9 focuses on providing legal identity for all, including birth registration. The United Nations University Centre for Policy Research (UNU-CPR), together with the Freedom Fund have examined modern slavery risks among individuals lacking documentation in their recent report, No Identity, No Protection.

Without official documentation, the risk of modern slavery increases as people, such as migrants, stateless minorities and those affected by discriminatory nationality laws, struggle to access basic essential services and are often driven into informal, dangerous and exploitative work. The report urges for government action, community engagement and international cooperation to address this issue.

Click here for the No Identity, No Protection report. 

More News

03 April 2023

The United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) will organize…

13 March 2023

The Bloomberg Philanthropies Data for Health Initiative’s Global Grants Program (GGP) is launching…

10 March 2023

(Newsletter March 2023) A new Community of Practice on measuring adult mortality…

10 March 2023

(Newsletter March 2023) A regional training workshop on ICD mortality coding for Pacific Island…

10 March 2023

(Newsletter March 2023) The Accelerator Lab and the core team of the Birth, Death…

10 March 2023

(Newsletter March 2023) The Data for Health (D4H) Initiative’s Gender Equity Unit aims to increase…

16 February 2023

(Newsletter: CRVS Insight February 2023) Many people around the world do not have official…

16 February 2023

(Newsletter: CRVS Insight February 2023) As one of the final steps in the project for assessing…

16 February 2023

(Newsletter: CRVS Insight February 2023) From 30 January to 3 February, 16 participants from Tonga…

16 February 2023

(Newsletter: CRVS Insight February 2023) A meeting of South East Asia (SEA) civil registrars was…