Birth Certificate Pakistan
Birth certificate
A birth certificate is a vital
record that documents the birth of a child. The term
"birth certificate" can refer to either the original document
certifying the circumstances of the birth or to a certified copy of or
representation of the ensuing registration of that birth. Depending on the jurisdiction,
a record of birth might or might not contain verification of the event by such
as a midwife or doctor.
History and contemporary times
The documentation of births is a
practice widely held throughout human civilization, especially in China, Egypt,
Greece, Rome, and Persia. The original purpose of vital statistics was for tax
purposes and for the determination of available military manpower. Births were
initially registered with churches, who maintained registers of births. This
practice continued into the 19th century.[1] The
compulsory registration of births with governmental agencies is a practice that
originated in the United Kingdom in
1853.[2]
Most countries have statutes and laws that regulate the
registration of births. In all countries, it is the responsibility of the
mother's physician, midwife,
hospital administrator, or the parents of the child to see that the birth is
properly registered with the appropriategovernment agency.
The actual record of birth is stored with a government agency. That
agency will issue certified copies or representations of the original birth
record upon request, which can be used to apply for government benefits, such aspassports.
The certification is signed and/or sealed by the registrar or other custodian
of birth records, who is commissioned by the government.
The right of every child to a name and nationality, and the
responsibility of national governments to achieve this are contained in Articles
7 and 8 in the United
Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child: "The child shall
be registered immediately after birth and shall have the right from birth to a
name, the right to acquire a nationality..." (CRC Article 7) and
"States Parties undertake to respect the right of the child to preserve
his or her identity, including nationality, name and family relations..."
(CRC Article 8).[3]
"...it's a small paper but
it actually establishes who you are and gives access to the rights and the privileges,
and the obligations, of citizenship" - Archbishop Desmond Tutu,
February 2005.[4]
Despite 191 countries ratifying the Convention, the births of
millions of children worldwide go unregistered. By their very nature, data
concerning unregistered children are approximate; however, it was estimated in
2008 that 51 million babies – more than two fifths of those born worldwide –
were not registered at birth.[5] This
phenomenon disproportionately impacts indigenous populations and even in many
developed countries, contributes to difficulties in fully accessing civic
rights.[6]
Birth registration opens the door to rights to children and adults
which many other human beings take for granted: to prove their age; to prove
their nationality; to receive healthcare; to go to school; to take exams; to be
adopted; to protection from under-age military service or conscription; to
marry; open a bank account; to hold a driving licence; to obtain a passport; to
inherit money or property; and to vote or stand for elected office.[7]
There are many reasons why births go unregistered, including
social and cultural beliefs and attitudes; alternative documents and naming
ceremonies; remote areas, poor infrastructure; economic barriers; lack of
office staff, equipment and training; legal and political restrictions; fear of
discrimination and persecution; war, conflict and unrest or simply the fact
that there is no system in place.[7][8][9][10][11][12]
Retrospective registration may be necessary where there is a
backlog of children whose births have gone unregistered. In Senegal, the
government is facilitating retrospective registration through free local court
hearings and the number of unregistered children has fallen considerably as a
result. In Sierra Leone, the government gave the National Office of Births and
Deaths special permission to issue birth certificates to children over seven.
In Bolivia, there was a successful three-year amnesty for the free registration
of young people aged between 12 and 18.[13]
Statelessness, or the lack of effective nationality, impacts the
daily lives of some 11-12 million people around the world. Perhaps those who
suffer most are stateless infants, children, and youth. Though born and raised
in their parents’ country of habitual residence, they lack formal recognition
of their existence.[14]
Birth certificates in
England and Wales
In England and Wales, the description "birth
certificate" is commonly used to describe a copy of the relevant entry in
a register of births.
The national registration of births, marriages and deaths in England and Wales started
in 1837; but at first there was no penalty for failing to register a birth. In
the system, all births are recorded in "registers", which have
columns for various particulars of the birth, usually including the name of the
child, sex, the names of the parents, the date of the birth, the location of
the birth, and sometimes additional information such as the name of the
attending physician, the race of the child, or the occupation of the parents.
These birth registers are maintained by some government agency that will issue
certified copies or representations of the entry upon request.
Pre-1837 birth and baptism records
Before the government's registration system was created, evidence
of births and/or baptisms (and also marriages and death or burials) was
dependent on the events being recorded in the records of the Church of England
or in those of other various churches – not all of which maintained such
records or all types of those records. Copies of such records are not issued by
the General Register Office; but can be obtained from these churches, or from
the local or national archive, which usually now keeps the records in original
or copy form.
Types of certified copies issued in England
and Wales
Each "full" birth certificate issued is actually a
certified copy of an entry from the register of births, either that held by the
local Register office or
at the General
Register Office for England and Wales, Southport; it does not
certify the birth but the information given in the register entry thus being
legally conclusive evidence of the event unless proved otherwise. The full
certificate is a copy of the entry, showing the child's surname, forename(s), date
of birth, sex, place of birth, the parent(s) name(s), their address and
occupations at the time of registration. Modern certified copies issued by the
General Register Office will usually be photocopies of the page or relevant
part of a page in the GRO's registers but will be written or typed copies if the
original is poor or e.g. contains intrusions from adjacent records or
annotations which do not form part of the prescribed record.
Full extracts will usually be required for most purposes involving
establishment of a person's identity; any extract by itself is no longer
generally accepted as evidence of identity and a specific warning that an
extract is not issued as evidence of identity has been printed on such
documents since the 1980s.
In addition, one can obtain a "short" birth certificate,
which is an abstract of the original entry and only includes the surname,
forename(s), date of birth, sex, registration district and sub-district in
which the birth took place. No fee is chargeable for this when issued at the time of registration and these are commonly found among
personal documents inherited from older relatives whose parents might have had
no practical need for a full extract; short extracts issued after the original
registration was made are subject to a prescribed fee. These extracts nowadays
have little practical usability due to the reduced information shown, in the
past often being used to avoid revealing the marital status of the parents or
as a cheaper written statement of somebody's birth date and place when a
recipient did not need the amount of corrobarative detail which is now often
required due to e.g. occurrences of identity theft.
The original registrations are required by law[15] to
be issued in the form of certified copies to any person who identifies an index
entry and pays the prescribed fee. They can be ordered by registered users from
the General Register Office
Certificate Ordering Service or
by postal or telephone ordering from the General Register Office or by post or
in person from local registrars.
Birth certificates in the
United States
See also: United States
nationality law, Citizenship in
the United States, and Birthright
citizenship in the United States
In the U.S., the issuance of birth certificates is a function of
the states,[16] even
though birthplace is a determinant of American citizenship.[17][18]
The federal and state governments have traditionally cooperated to
some extent to improve vital statistics. From 1900 to 1946 the U.S. Census
Bureau designed standard birth certificates, collected vital statistics on a
national basis, and generally sought to improve the accuracy of vital
statistics. In 1946 that responsibility was passed to the U.S. Public Health Service.
Unlike the British system of recording all births in "registers", the
states file an individual document for each and every birth. In most states
this document is entitled a "Certificate of Live Birth".[19]
The U.S. National Center for Health Statistics creates standard
forms that are recommended for use by the individual states to document births.
However, states are free to create their own forms.[20] As
a result, neither the appearance nor the information content of birth
certificate forms is uniform across states. These forms are completed by the
attendant at birth or a hospital administrator, which are then forwarded to a
local or state registrar, who stores the record and issues certified copies
upon request.[1]
Types of certified copies issued
According to the Department of Health and Human Services, Office
of Inspector General, as of 2000 there were more than 6,000 entities issuing
birth certificates. The Inspector General report states that according to staff
at the Immigration and
Naturalization Service’s Forensics Document Laboratory the number of
legitimate birth certificate versions in use exceeded 14,000.[21]
Acceptance of short forms
In the case of applying for a US passport, not all legitimate
government-issued birth certificates are acceptable:
A certified birth certificate has
a registrar's raised, embossed, impressed or multicolored seal, registrar's
signature, and the date the certificate was filed with the registrar's office,
which must be within 1 year of your birth. Please note, some short (abstract)
versions of birth certificates may not be acceptable for passport purposes.
Beginning April 1, 2011, all
birth certificates must also include the full names of the applicant's
parent(s).[22]
The US State Department has paid close attention to abstract
certificates from both Texas and California. There have been reports of a high
instance of midwife registration fraud along the border region between Texas
and Mexico,[23] [24] and
the Texas abstract certificate form does not list the name or occupation of the
attendant. The California Abstract of Birth did not include an embossed seal,
was no longer considered a secure document, and have not been issued in
California since 2001.
Q. I have a "Certified
Abstract" that I obtained in the 1990s. I am now being told it is not
sufficient (e.g. passports), and I need to get a full embossed certificate. What
should I do?
A. California law allowed for the
issuance of abstracts for a period. Due to the increase of fraud, outside
agencies became stricter in the forms of vital records they would accept, so
State law was changed so abstracts are no longer issued. Unfortunately, that
means you will probably need to replace any abstracts with a newer full
certified copy. If you have an abstract issued from our office, please contact
us to discuss replacement.[25]
Other forms
Most hospitals in the U.S. issue a souvenir birth certificate
which typically includes the footprints of
the newborn. However, these birth certificates are not legally accepted as
proof of age or citizenship, and are frequently rejected by the Bureau of Consular Affairs duringpassport applications. Many Americans believe
the souvenir records to be their official birth certificates, when in reality
they hold little legal value.[26]
Birth certificates in cases of adoptions
In the United States, when an legal adoption is finalized adopted,
the government seals the original birth certificate and will issue a
replacement birth certificate substituting the individual's birth name with the
name selected by the adoptive parents, and replacing and birth parents' names
with the adoptive parents. In those cases, adopted individuals are not granted
access to their own original birth certificates upon request. Laws vary
depending on the state where the birth was originally registered and the
adoption was finalized. Some states allow adopted people unrestricted access to
their own original birth certificates, while in others the certificate is
available only if the biological parents have given their permission or a
petition has been granted by the court of jurisdiction. Other jurisdictions do
not allow adopted people access to their own original birth certificates under
any circumstances.[citation
needed]
Birth certificates in
Canada
In Canada, the issuance of birth certificates is a function of the
provinces or territories.[27]
Agencies or various ministers are in charge of issuing birth
certificates[28]:
§ Alberta - Department of Vital Statistics
(Service Alberta)
§ British Columbia - Vital Statistics Agency (Ministry of
Health)
§ Manitoba - Vital Statistics Agency (Ministry of
Healthy Living, Seniors and Consumer Affairs/Consumer and Corporate Affairs)
§ New Brunswick - Vital Statistics (Service New
Brunswick)
§ Newfoundland and
Labrador - Vital
Statistics Government Services (Service NL)
§ Northwest
Territories - Vital
Statistics (Department of Health and Social Services - Health Services
Administration Division)
§ Nova Scotia -
Registrar General Dvision of Vital Statistics (Service Nova Scotia and
Municipal Relations)
§ Nunavut - Registrar General of Vital
Statistics (Nunavut Health and Social Services)
§ Ontario - Office of Registrar General-Service
Ontario (Ministry of Government Services)
§ Prince Edward
Island - Vital
Statistics (Health and Social Services)
§ Quebec - Director of Civil State (Minister of
Justice)
§ Saskatchewan -
Vital Statistics-Information Service Corporation (Department of Health)
§ Yukon - Vital Statistics (Ministry of Health
and Social Services - Health Services)
Types of
certified copies issued
There are two types of birth certificates issued:
§ Long form
- legal size or two page form with details of the person, their parents', place
of birth, certification by the parents, signature and stamp of the issuing
agency or department. Recent forms are in English and French.
§ Short
form or card - provides name, birth date, place of birth, date of registration,
date of issue, registration number, certificate number, signature of registrar
general
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