In general, the example would be.... A child can derive citizenship by descent from either parent. The situation may be one where the child of a Canadian is born abroad. If they're born in Canada, or whatever the situation is, they automatically have citizenship from birth in Canada. Therefore, it would be a situation where a child is born abroad and where they may have a Canadian parent, for example, who is already born abroad in the first generation. That's my personal situation and the situation of many people we all know.
If you're the first generation born abroad, you're not able to automatically pass on your Canadian citizenship to your child born abroad, hence the discussion we've had in this committee about the helpfulness of a connection test on the parent.
The statelessness will arise when the other parent is not able to transmit another citizenship, for whatever reasons, due to the laws of the country that this parent comes from. We know there are places in the world where persons who are stateless come from. It's those kinds of examples and cases. Some countries have laws where you may be able to derive citizenship by descent from a grandparent, or parents may have multiple citizenships. They may not only have one. That's the reason why....
Really, a case of true statelessness for the child of a Canadian would be rare. I'm not saying that it hasn't happened because, as you've just heard, we've had a small number of applications since 2013. However, it's rare because you would derive citizenship from both parents and sometimes the grandparents as well.
Thank you.