'Documents, Please': Welfare State Extensions and Advances in Birth Certification in the Developing World

50 Pages Posted: 21 Jul 2014

See all articles by Robert Brill

Robert Brill

Cornell University

Wendy Hunter

University of Texas at Austin

Date Written: July 18, 2014

Abstract

A birth certificate is essential to exercising citizenship yet vast numbers of poor people in developing countries have no official record of their existence. Few academic studies analyze the conditions under which governments come to document and certify births routinely, and those that do leave much to be explained, namely, why non-autocratic governments at low to middle levels of economic development prioritize birth registration. This article draws attention to the impetus that state-building initiatives give to identity documentation. The empirical focus is on contemporary Latin America, where extensions in institutionalized social protection since the 1990s have increased the demand for and supply of birth registration, raising the life chances of the poor and creating new political constituencies. Our argument promises to have broader applicability as welfare states form in other developing regions.

Suggested Citation

Brill, Robert and Hunter, Wendy, 'Documents, Please': Welfare State Extensions and Advances in Birth Certification in the Developing World (July 18, 2014). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2468204 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2468204

Robert Brill

Cornell University ( email )

Ithaca, NY 14853
United States

Wendy Hunter (Contact Author)

University of Texas at Austin ( email )

2317 Speedway
Austin, TX Texas 78712
United States

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