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So, when I was 14,
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my family was in the process of adopting
my little brothers from Ethiopia.
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And one day my mom asked,
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"What day should we put
for their birthday?"
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"Uh, the day they were born, obviously?"
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Ridiculous question.
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And then my mom said,
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"Well, Kristen,
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neither of your little brothers
have a birth certificate,
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so how do you suggest
we find out when that was?"
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Mind blown.
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Now, 20 years later,
I'm still working on it,
-
except instead of trying
to solve the mystery
-
of my brothers' missing
birth certificates,
-
I try to solve this problem globally.
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So what do birth certificates have to do
with international development?
-
To answer that, we have to look back
at the original development agenda,
-
the human rights agenda.
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So in 1948, the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights,
-
for the first time,
-
set a shared vision of basic
human rights and dignities
-
that apply to all people in all nations:
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Article 6, the right to be recognized
as a person before the law.
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Or, a legal identity.
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For children, this is a birth certificate.
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And despite this being
a universal human right,
-
one billion people today
have no record they exist,
-
making it one of the greatest
human rights violations of our time,
-
yet nobody seems to know about it.
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In the face of world poverty and hunger,
-
making sure everyone in the world
has a legal identity
-
doesn't really seem important,
-
but in reality it is.
-
See, early in my career,
-
I was working with a social worker
in a slum community in Mumbai,
-
and we were following up
on a case with this little girl
-
who had contracted polio as a baby
and was paralyzed from the waist down.
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When we arrived at the home,
-
we found her on the floor.
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Her legs were badly scarred and infected,
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she was malnourished,
-
she had never gone to school
-
and she had spent most of her life
confined to this small, dark room.
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When we left, I asked the social worker
what the case plan was,
-
and she said, "Well first, we have
to get her a birth certificate."
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I was a little taken aback.
-
I said, "Well, don't you think we need
to get her some social assistance
-
and a safe place to live
and into a school?"
-
She goes, "Exactly, which is why
we need to get her a birth certificate."
-
See, without a legal identity,
-
you are not recognized
as a person by the government.
-
And a person who doesn't officially exist
can't access government services,
-
and the government
can only provide services
-
for the number of people they know about.
-
Hence, people are overlooked, for example,
by routine immunization services.
-
People without a legal identity
are both uncounted and unprotected.
-
They're among the poorest
members of society
-
from the most marginalized communities.
-
They're victims of trafficking.
-
Human traffickers know that
it's nearly impossible to find someone
-
if there was never a record
they existed in the first place.
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They're victims of exploitation,
such as child marriage and child labor.
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Without a birth certificate,
how do you prove a child is still a child?
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They're among the stateless;
-
birth certificates provide proof
of who your parents are
-
and where you were born,
-
the two main factors
for acquiring nationality.
-
Of the one billion people in the world
without a legal identity,
-
the vast majority are children
who were never registered at birth.
-
In the least developed nations,
-
the births of over 60 percent of children
have never been recorded.
-
A study across 17 countries
in sub-Saharan Africa
-
found that 80 percent of children
did not have a birth certificate.
-
Out of the countries
that have not yet achieved
-
universal birth registration coverage,
-
in 26 countries, a birth certificate
is required to access health care,
-
including vaccines.
-
In 37 countries, it's required
to access social assistance
-
intended to bring people out of poverty.
-
And in 59 countries,
a birth certificate is required
-
for a child to be enrolled
or complete school.
-
A birth certificate is also often required
for other forms of legal identity,
-
like a national ID or a passport.
-
And some form of legal identity
in almost every country is required
-
to vote, get a SIM card
or open a bank account.
-
In fact, of the 1.7 billion people
in the world who are unbanked,
-
20 percent is due to not having
a legal identity document.
-
Now, you don't have to be an expert
to see that this, times a billion,
-
is a big problem.
-
So it's not surprising
that evidence shows
-
that improved birth registration
coverage goes hand in hand
-
with improved development outcomes,
-
from poverty alleviation
-
to better health, nutrition, education,
-
economic improvement
-
and safe and orderly migration.
-
In 2015, world leaders came together
-
and promised that they would
uphold human rights of all people
-
and leave no one behind
-
in efforts to end poverty,
-
hunger
-
and reduce inequalities.
-
But how are they going
to uphold human rights
-
and how do they know
if anyone is being left behind
-
if they do not know who they are
or where they are
-
in the first place?
-
So what can countries do about this?
-
Now, there's no one-size-fits-all model,
-
because every country context is unique.
-
There are five proven interventions
that can be applied to any system.
-
Number one, reduce the distance.
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Two, remove the cost.
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Three, simplify the process.
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Four, remove discrimination.
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Five, increase demand.
-
Gender discrimination
remains a hidden problem,
-
because statistically,
there's no difference
-
between registration rates
of boys and girls.
-
But the discrimination
isn't against the child --
-
it's against the mother.
-
Angola was one of 35 countries
that required a father's name
-
or to be present in order
for the child's birth to be registered.
-
So in situations where the father
is unknown, unwilling
-
or unable to claim paternity,
-
the mothers are legally prevented
from registering the births
-
of their own children.
-
So to address this,
Angola put a policy in place
-
allowing mothers to register
their children as a single parent.
-
In Tanzania, in 2012,
-
only 13 percent of children
had a birth certificate.
-
So the government
came up with a new system.
-
They put registration centers
in existing infrastructure,
-
such as community wards
-
and in health facilities.
-
So they brought the services closer
to the people who needed them.
-
They removed the fee.
-
They simplified the process
and automated it,
-
so the birth certificate
could be issued on the spot.
-
To increase demand, they rolled out
a public awareness campaign,
-
letting people know
that there's a new process
-
and why it was important to register
the births of their children.
-
In just a few years in the districts
where the new system was put in place,
-
83 percent of children
now have birth certificates,
-
and they're in the process
of rolling this out nationwide.
-
So what can you do?
-
See, I believe we are all united
by our humanity.
-
We live on the same earth.
We breathe the same air.
-
And while none of us chose to be born
or the situation we were born into,
-
we do get to choose how we live.
-
Change occurs when a moment of awareness
-
or a moment of compassion
-
inspires a person to act.
-
And through our collective action,
-
we become the most powerful
agents of change.
-
And when the cost of inaction is
innocent children are left unprotected,
-
unvaccinated, unable to go to school,
-
growing up to be adults who are unable
to find decent work or vote,
-
trapped in a cycle of poverty,
exclusion and invisibility,
-
it comes down to us
-
to take this issue out of the darkness
-
and into the light.
-
Because it's not every day you get
the opportunity to change the world,
-
but today,
-
you do.
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Thanks.
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(Applause)