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II International framework for refugee protection
II.2 The 1951 Geneva Convention
II.2.1 Criteria for granting protection
II.2.1.1 Alienage
II.2.1.1.3 Dual or multiple nationality
I Introduction to International Refugee Law: background and context
II International framework for refugee protection
II.1 Universal principles and concepts of refugee protection
II.2 The 1951 Geneva Convention
II.2.1 Criteria for granting protection
II.2.1.1 Alienage
II.2.1.1.1 Outside the country of nationality
II.2.1.1.2 Owing to fear, is unable or unwilling to avail self of protection of country of nationality
II.2.1.1.3 Dual or multiple nationality
II.2.1.1.4 Stateless refugees
II.2.1.2 Well-founded fear
II.2.1.3 Persecution
II.2.1.4 The five grounds of persecution: Race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, political opinion
II.2.1.5 Internal protection alternative
II.2.1.6 Exclusion from the Convention refugee status
II.2.1.7 Cessation of the refugee status
II.2.2 Access to territory and protection at sea
II.2.3 Access to procedure
II.2.4 Reception conditions
II.2.5 Procedures for determining refugee status
II.2.6 Content of refugee status
II.2.7 Detention
II.3 Other forms of international protection
II.4 Internally Displaced Persons
III African Framework for Refugee Protection
IV Framework for refugee and IDP protection in the Americas
V Asian Framework for refugee protection
VI European framework for refugee protection
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II.2.1.1.3 Dual or multiple nationality
Soft Law
UNHCR, ‘
Handbook on Procedures and Criteria for Determining Refugee Status under the 1951 Convention and the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees
’, HCR/IP/4/Rev.1, 1979, paras. 106–107.
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