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International Commission on Civil Status

International Commission on Civil Status
Abbreviation ICCS
Formation September 30, 1948; 68 years ago (1948-09-30) (provisional committee)
December 1949 (official recognition)
Type Intergovernmental Organization
Purpose international cooperation in civil status matters and further exchange of information between registrars
Headquarters Secretariat General
Location
  • Strasbourg
Official language
French
President
Macniven
Secretary-general
Pintens
Main organ
General Assembly
Website ciec1.org

The International Commission on Civil Status, or ICCS (French: Commission internationale de l'état civil, or CIEC), is a European intergovernmental organization and the first organization created after World War II in order to work for European integration. Provisionally established in Amsterdam, Netherlands, on September 29 and 30, 1948, it predates both the Council of Europe (planned since 1946 but officially founded only in 1949) and the European Union. Seated in Strasbourg, France, the organisation currently regroups 16 member States and 8 observer States. The official language of the Commission is French.

Founded in the post-war context of millions of refugees, missing persons and displaced people, the organization's aim was to facilitate the cooperation between States in establishing, recognizing, validating vital records or any other type of official documents used as birth, marriage, divorce or death certificates. It did so by providing standardized translations of vital terms in vital records and via multilateral conventions (for example the Convention on the issue of multilingual extracts from civil status records which provided for hassle free acceptance of extracts and Convention on the recognition of decisions recording a sex reassignment on legal sex status). The ICCS has signed co-operation agreements with the Council of Europe (in 1955), the Hague Conference on Private International Law (in 1969), the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (in 1981) and the European Union (in 1983).


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