The primary form of legal identity in the Marshall Islands is the birth certificate. The Marshall Islands has a birth registry which provides that “every child born in the Marshall Islands shall be registered by the Registrar.” [1]If a child is not registered within twelve months of birth the child cannot be registered unless ordered by a court. [2]When a child is registered the registrar provides a birth certificate. [3]There is no mention of birth registry providing citizenship in the Births, Deaths, and Marriages Registration Act (1988). Birth registration, while compulsory by law in the country, requires individuals to travel to Majuro or Kwajalein in order to complete registration. [4]However, the registration of births is inconsistent, particularly in remote areas as there is duplication of records and data collection is being undertaken by multiple programs due to a lack of coordination and collaboration between the health ministry and the civil registration office, leading to the inconsistency. [5] Marshall Islands also does not have a vital statistics system to analyse the civil registration data. [6]

Marshall Islands also has a national ID card, but it is currently not digitised. [7]According to the Marshall Islands’ Registrations of Persons Act of 1989, only citizens of Marshall Islands are eligible to apply for a national ID card, a document that verifies an individual’s identity. A national ID card does not confer citizenship. [8]The national identification card does not confer citizenship. [9]
Citizenship is acquired through parentage, [10]birth if not eligible for citizenship in another country, citation_11 registration if adopted, or through naturalization. [12]