Title: PowerPoint Presentation Citizenship
1Abandonment of LPR status, commission of act
rendering deportable or inadmissible upon
application for new admission, or cause for
rescission.
Admission to permanent residency either through
IV or AOS
It is at this stage that one has to understand
applicability of the deportability and
inadmissibility provisions, relief from removal
and the waivers
2Conferral of citizenship
Adjustment of Status or departure for IV
application
Admission at border or removal for inadmissibility
Application for naturalization
Visa interview
3Citizenship(Acquisition and Loss)
4Avenues to Citizenship(Principles found in Laws
of most Countries)
- Birth in a country
- Birth outside of the country to 1 or more citizen
parents - Acquisition of citizenship where person was
neither born within territory nor of parents who
were citizens.
5- Birth in a country Jus Soli
- Birth outside of the country to 1 or more
citizen parents Jus Sanguinis
- Acquisition of citizenship were person was
neither born within territory nor of parents who
were citizens Naturalization
6Dual or More Nationalities
- Nothing other than a nations own laws may
preclude the possibility of multiple
nationalities. - Nationality is for each country to define
- Guiding principle is against statelessness
- Historically dual nationality was to be avoided
7(No Transcript)
8U.S. law and the laws of many other countries
allow for this multiple nationality possibility.
- U.S. law provides for renunciation of other
citizenship upon naturalization - But a full and effective renunciation may not be
enforceable by the U.S. - The U.S. could, but does not condition
naturalization on full relinquishment of
citizenship of other citizenships. - Consider the implications of such a condition
- Some countries do not recognize renunciation
- Even U.S. law only recognizes renunciation of
U.S. citizenship when it is done in a formal
process overseas before a U.S. Consul after
extensive warnings of the consequences.
9U.S. Law of Citizenship
10Birth in the U.S.(Constitutional Citizenship)
- All persons born in the U.S. and subject to
jurisdiction are citizens - Based on the 14th Amendment enacted after the
civil war - Perhaps the most durable form of citizenship
because it is based in the Constitution - Does not include children of accredited diplomats
11Citizenship by Overseas Birth to U.S. Citizen
Parent/s(Statutory citizenship)
- No right to such citizenship
- This citizenship is subject to congressional
(statutory) restrictions and has been amended
often - The most recent amendment was in 2000 Child
Citizenship Act of 2000 - Allows foreign born children (biological or
adopted) to become USC automatically
12Naturalization(Art. 1, Sec. 8 clause 4)
- Procedure through which an alien becomes a U.S.
citizen - Prerequisites
- Permanent residence
- 18 years of age except where derivative
beneficiary of parents naturalization - residence in state for at least 3 months in the
state where application is filed
13- Resident for 5 years or 3 years depending on how
LPR status was obtained - Physical presence for at least 1/2 of the above
period - Good moral character
- Attachment to the principles of the U.S.
Constitution - Willingness to bear arms or provide noncombat
service
14Loss of Citizenship
15- While permanent residency may be lost by
abandonment, citizenship may only be lost by
voluntary renunciation. - Statutory provisions governing loss of
citizenship have for the most part been found to
be unconstitutional - However, since citizenship obtained through
naturalization is governed by the plenary powers
of Congress to determine the rules of
naturalization,
16- But these have been negated by court decisions
placing the burden on the government to prove
that act was voluntary and intended as
relinquishment of US citizenship
17Denaturalization
- Loss of citizenship acquired by route of
permanent residence is easier to lose than
citizenship acquired by birth in the U.S. - The basic pre-requisite for denaturalization is
for the government to establish that the
naturalization was illegally procured or that a
material fact which would have rendered the
applicant was concealed. Fraud
18Loss of Nationality by Action(As provided in the
INA)
- Foreign naturalization
- Military service
- Accepting position in foreign government
- Act of treason
- These provisions were interpreted as presumptive
of an intent to relinquish U.S. citizenship
Notwithstanding these statutory provisions, the
Supreme Court has interpreted the law as
precluding anything other than voluntary
relinquishment.
19- Therefore there are different rules governing
naturalized v. citizens by birth. - Persons who are naturalized may lose their
citizenship through denaturalization or
renunciation. - Persons who acquire citizenship at birth (or
naturalization) may only lose their citizenship
by their own actions (voluntary relinquishment). - in the past there were provisions requiring
persons to have resided in the U.S. for certain
periods of time in order to retain their
citizenship