The Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), in collaboration with DLA Piper Law Firm and civil society organisations, has undertaken a pilot mapping of national forms of admission and stay which are based on human rights or humanitarian grounds.
The research addresses three main questions: a) what are the human rights and humanitarian grounds of admission and stay that exist at the national level? b) what is the content of the protection granted? Does this protection only imply a suspension of removal or would it also involve the grant of residence? What are the rights attached to such protection? c) what procedures have States put in place to assess these claims based on human rights and humanitarian grounds?
The initial research was conducted in some 27 countries and the 10 country summaries included in the publication represent a sample of those countries in which examples of relevant practice were found (Argentina, Austria, Brazil, Finland, Hong Kong, Morocco, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Portugal, and Spain). The main findings of the pilot mapping include the following:
For more information: