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Préface
This interdisciplinary collection provides the first book-length treatment of statelessness in Asia.
Auteur
Michelle Foster is a Professor and Director of the Peter McMullin Centre on Statelessness at Melbourne Law School. Elected as a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Social Sciences and a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Law, Michelle is a leading international authority on refugee law, human rights and statelessness.Jaclyn Neo is an Associate Professor and the Director of the Centre for Asian Legal Studies at the National University of Singapore (NUS) Faculty of Law. Jaclyn is an award-winning scholar of comparative constitutional law as well as law and religion in Asia.Christoph Sperfeldt is Senior Lecturer at Macquarie Law School and Honorary Fellow at the Peter McMullin Centre on Statelessness at the University of Melbourne. He has worked for more than fifteen years on human rights and statelessness in Southeast Asia.
Résumé
This interdisciplinary collection, edited by leading scholars, provides the first book-length treatment of statelessness in the region in which most stateless persons reside. This book fills a critical gap in understanding statelessness in Asia, offering a unique interdisciplinary and comprehensive set of perspectives. This book brings case studies and expertise together to explore statelessness in Asia, itself a diverse region, and offers new insights as to what it means to be, de facto and de jure, stateless. In identifying key points of similarities and divergences across the region, as well as critical nodes for comparisons, this book aims to provide fresh frameworks for comparative research in this area.
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