Why the Global Alliance and why is it important?

The Global Alliance is both a space and a communicative energy to bring forward our commitment for no statelessness anywhere in the world. The global landscape and statelessness are fundamentally needed now because it creates a platform, an initiative and an energy that works to finally end statelessness worldwide.

The community of the Global Alliance will be a workspace that is inspiring, that shines a light on how together we can work on a common human rights problem. And how a diversity of views from the people most affected, stateless people themselves, to experts, civil society organizations, to UN agencies, to governments can come together, discuss, think, examine good practice, and ultimately take the steps necessary to end statelessness.

From all those myriads of problems, this issue, statelessness, is a fundamentally fixable one. And so, we are confident that if we pull together and do the work and mobilize the resources, we can arrive at the year 2030 with every single person on earth carrying a nationality and participating fully in their own societies.

Claude Cahn
Human Rights Officer, UN Human Rights Office (OHCHR)

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Bishop Kortu K. Brown, the Apostolic Pentecostal Church and Church Aid, Inc., Liberia.
Bishop Kortu K. Brown
Churches Have a Responsibility to Act Against Statelessness

Churches and faith-based organizations have a moral responsibility and an important role to play in preventing and reducing statelessness. Drawing on their moral voice, community presence, and long-standing commitment to social justice, churches are well placed to support practical actions that protect vulnerable people and help ensure every person has a nationality.

In Liberia, Church Aid, Inc., together with its partners, has demonstrated this potential in practice. Through community-based initiatives to support birth registration, more than 20,000 children were able to obtain birth certificates, reducing their risk of statelessness and exclusion.

For many churches, engagement on statelessness is grounded in scripture and faith. The Bible reminds us not to oppress the foreigner, because we ourselves know what it means to be vulnerable. It calls believers to show hospitality to strangers and to stand up for those who cannot defend themselves. When people are hurting, the church has a responsibility to bring relief. A Christianity that ignores injustice and suffering does not reflect the character or mission of Christ.

Stateless persons are no exception.

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Latin American and Caribbean Council of Civil Registry, Identity and Vital Statistics (CLARCIEV)
Latin American and Caribbean Civil Registration Week: An Initiative Ensuring Identity for All

The Latin American and Caribbean Council for Civil Registration, Identity, and Vital Statistics (CLARCIEV) is the organization behind the campaign “Latin American and Caribbean Civil Registration Week,” held from September 1 to 16, 2025, and which sought to safeguard the fundamental right to identity.

Under the slogan “Latin America and the Caribbean, a region without invisible people: identity for all!”, CLARCIEV intensified its efforts to register births, covering both children and adults who still lacked a birth certificate. As a result of the campaign a total of 32,177 birth registrations were performed. 

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Co-Lead, Global Movement Against Statelessness
Christy Chitengu
One Year On: The Movement’s Journey Within the Global Alliance to End Statelessness

Proximity and privilege deeply shape whose voices are heard in the global struggle to end statelessness. For millions of stateless people, barriers such as geography, limited resources, and lack of access to documentation mean exclusion not only from their governments but also from the global humanitarian and advocacy spaces that claim to represent them. Meanwhile, those with passports and institutional power often move freely within international systems that remain inaccessible to the very people they aim to serve.

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