Together with the European Network on Statelessness (ENS) and Apatride Network, we’ve published a new Guide to Collaborative Advocacy on Statelessness.
The Guide grew out of many conversations around advocacy, participation and accessibility — and around the question of how advocacy spaces can become more meaningful, collaborative and inclusive for people affected by statelessness.
It includes practical tools, examples and principles for people who want to engage in advocacy, as well as for allies and institutions working alongside stateless communities.
We all agree that people with lived experience are experts in their own realities and should be centred in changemaking processes.
We hope this Guide can offer a useful framework and starting point for building advocacy spaces that are more accessible, collaborative and grounded in lived expertise.
Read the Guide here.
Alongside the Guide, we also want to share a short video in which representatives from our teams and community speak about why the Guide was created and how it can support stateless communities in engaging in advocacy.
Watch the video here.


