Single parents everywhere face a demanding reality.
They carry the responsibilities of two people at the same time: raising children, maintaining employment, and navigating administrative systems that often assume the presence of two parents.
But for some families there is an additional obstacle that is rarely discussed.
Some children grow up without a clear citizenship status.
These children are not simply migrants, nor are they foreigners in the usual sense. In many situations they fall into a legal grey zone where their identity is not fully recognised by any state. In legal terms, this situation is often described as statelessness or unclear citizenship.
For single parents, this situation can create difficulties that go far beyond the ordinary challenges of raising a family.
When Identity Becomes an Administrative Problem
In modern societies, citizenship functions as the key that unlocks almost every administrative door.
School registration, healthcare access, travel documents, social benefits, and many other everyday procedures depend on a clearly recognised legal identity.
When that identity is unclear, the system can become extremely complicated.
Authorities may request documents that cannot be produced.
Different institutions may interpret the situation differently.
Procedures that should take weeks may take years.
For a single parent, this means additional stress and uncertainty.
Instead of focusing primarily on raising their children, they may find themselves navigating complex legal and administrative systems.
The Hidden Impact on Children
The consequences are not only bureaucratic.
Children who grow up without a clear citizenship status often face practical limitations such as:
- difficulties obtaining passports or travel documents
- uncertainty regarding their legal identity
- administrative barriers when accessing certain rights
- long waiting periods for official decisions
Most of these children are fully integrated into the societies where they live.
They attend local schools, speak the language, and grow up like any other child.
Yet legally, their situation remains unresolved.
Why Single Parents Are Affected More
Citizenship procedures often require documents or declarations from both parents.
If one parent is absent, unreachable, or unwilling to cooperate, the process can become extremely complicated.
In such situations, the single parent carries the entire burden of resolving the problem.
This burden is not only legal or administrative.
It can also be emotional and financial.
The parent may need to communicate with multiple institutions, lawyers, embassies, and administrative authorities — sometimes across several countries.
A Problem That Still Lacks Visibility
Despite the seriousness of the issue, the topic of stateless or citizenship-uncertain children rarely appears in public discussion.
Yet across Europe there are thousands of families dealing with exactly this reality.
Most of them navigate these difficulties quietly within administrative systems that were never designed to address such complex situations.
At its core, the issue touches a fundamental principle:
every child deserves a clear legal identity.
