岛屿国家消失导致无国籍现象增多:国际法的现状是否提供了足够的保护?

Marija Dobrić
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摘要

科学预测表明,到2100年,图瓦卢和基里巴斯等几个地势低洼的岛国将由于海平面上升而消失。整个领土被淹没将产生各种后果,包括大批岛民流离失所。在这种背景下,如何在他们未来的东道国保护他们的人权问题是非常重要的。事实上,如果消失的岛国被认为已经失去了国家地位,它们的人权保护很可能会变得更加困难。没有任何国家的国籍,根据国际法,这些流离失所的岛民将是无国籍的。在本文中,作者评估了流离失所的岛屿人口是否受到现有国际法规范的充分保护,或者是否需要国际社会制定新的规则来应对这些未来的挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Rising Statelessness Due to Disappearing Island States: Does the Current Status of International Law Offer Sufficient Protection?
Scientific prognoses have shown that by the year 2100, several low-lying island states such as Tuvalu and Kiribati will disappear due to rising sea levels. The submergence of whole territories will have consequences including the displacement of a huge number of islanders. In that context, the question of how to protect their human rights in their future host states is of great importance. In fact, their human rights protection will most likely prove even more difficult if disappearing island states are considered to have lost statehood. Without the nationality of any state, those displaced islanders will be stateless under international law. In this article, the author assesses whether displaced island populations are sufficiently protected by existing international law norms or whether the international community is called upon to create new rules addressing these future challenges.
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