He was granted asylum, grew up in Brighton and applied for British citizenship. |
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In practice, these official attempts to promote digital citizenship have been complemented by others probably not envisioned by the government. |
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A community of foreign expatriates who have taken Vincentian citizenship live in the southeast section of the main island. |
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The law was amended before it was passed, making citizenship available to residents who passed Estonian language tests. |
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It turns out that he was donkey deep in efforts to help this property developer well beyond supporting him for citizenship. |
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Marriage and domiciliation confers citizenship via registration or naturalization. |
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So it is entirely consistent that we have now enshrined permanently in this bill the new rules around dual citizenship. |
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For Black, the high point of his life's work came in 2001 when he was ennobled after renouncing his Canadian citizenship. |
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About the same time his family disowned him and he was stripped of his Saudi citizenship. |
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Then we can learn to exercise citizenship, break through the deference to authority which has silenced and disempowered us, and effect change. |
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New forms of citizenship and public life are simultaneously enabled by new technology and restricted by market power and surveillance. |
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Only after three years work could a guest worker even apply for citizenship, and this could only be granted after five years. |
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The editorial involved no dilation on the privileges or responsibilities of citizenship or the significance and greatness of our history. |
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Let's propagate the idea that citizenship is a responsibility rather than a right. |
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For all of its many virtues, this literature has generally privileged issues of rights and citizenship over commerce and sociability. |
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First, liberty is the prerogative of citizens, and a large majority of the population will not possess citizenship. |
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One of our group just got his English citizenship, so we made him order typical British fare like prawn cocktail. |
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For Marshall, citizenship expresses full membership in the national political community. |
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It is a great way to develop cross-cultural awareness, global citizenship and community involvement. |
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After a period of lawabiding citizenship, mechanisms exist at law to expunge long-past criminal records and restore the right to own firearms. |
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Instead they died in the line of duty and subsequently received posthumous citizenship amidst much fanfare and flag-waving. |
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Two Bills are now dealing with matters of posthumous citizenship are before the U.S. House of Representatives. |
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Johnson's cosmopolites respond to changing dominant discourses of nation and citizenship. |
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The victims of the partition also knew the irreversibility of the choice of their new citizenship. |
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His name indicates that his family was granted the citizenship by the Flavian dynasty of Vespasian. |
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It is also an invaluable act of citizenship and is as diverse as society itself. |
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As New Labour has proven, these are not the types of politicians who are natural pluralists ready to reinforce democratic citizenship. |
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Policing is becoming not only central to our understanding of citizenship, it is becoming a contestable political issue as never before. |
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And while we're talking definitions, perhaps the five-star fink who took my display would like to brush up on the definition of good citizenship. |
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The modelling of all human behaviour on the contractualism and instrumentality of the market corrodes any politics of solidarity and citizenship. |
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Otherwise, anyone wanting to talk fills out a form at the nearby Kreta Ayer Police Post and shows proof of citizenship. |
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It is conceivable that we will find ourselves going to the polls again to redefine our citizenship. |
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The value of citizenship is eroded in the enthusiasm of these outfits to inflame communal passions to win adherents to the extremist cult. |
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The role of active citizenship would be amply demonstrated, without having to afford complainants full legal party status. |
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He has put out feelers regarding a switch to American citizenship, a move that would let him own U.S. broadcast properties. |
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Salaried physicians indicated a greater willingness to engage in organizational citizenship behaviors. |
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It is inarguable that the amendment to Article 9 has conferred citizenship rights that are more liberal than any other EU country. |
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Unlike other parts of the Empire, Britain's 1914 and 1948 Nationality Acts affirmed that there was no colour bar to British citizenship. |
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The CIS had no common parliament, president, or citizenship, only a vague pledge to work on collective security. |
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If the bid was successful it would help support community cohesion and develop citizenship among young people. |
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The democratic principle in this form expresses an ideal of citizenship rather than a standard of liberal legitimacy. |
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Still others sold their votes to wealthy patricians, thus giving up one of the key features of their citizenship. |
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The scheme was launched in September and involves pupils being rewarded for good classwork, behaviour and citizenship. |
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This is not to say that anyone who is not a citizen or abjures his or her citizenship is lacking in civil rights. |
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Emphasis is on civics and citizenship elements, although the kit also supports activities in science, art and English. |
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It is the responsibility of the state to maintain the supremacy of citizenship. |
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Most of those countries would grant citizenship to anyone who could produce a grandparent who was a citizen. |
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While he's been granted citizenship, he says hundreds of others are living in limbo. |
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The programme aims to help youngsters develop positive attitudes towards life and citizenship. |
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It was later discovered he had moved to Russia, where he had been granted citizenship. |
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The actor, who is part Italian, was due to be granted honorary citizenship this week. |
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He had been told that his long pending application for Indian citizenship had been granted. |
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After working outside Ireland for many years he now has dual Irish and Canadian citizenship. |
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Granted refugee status, he was able to seek citizenship in a European country. |
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He is in no different position from anyone else who obtains citizenship by false means. |
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He still looks back with pride on the day he was granted his American citizenship. |
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The bill also makes it unnecessarily tough to grant citizenship to a resident who has a minor conviction. |
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Citizenship of the Union shall complement and not replace national citizenship. |
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Dual citizenship is supported and recognised as acceptable in this country. |
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If this involves switching citizenship or obtaining dual nationality then so be it. |
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The professor, who now has dual British and Australian citizenship, expects to take up his new role in October. |
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At the end of their 25 years' service these auxiliaries were granted citizenship. |
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The couple set up home in London and, in 1972, Ashkenazy took Icelandic citizenship. |
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House-to-house searches may be necessary to find and eliminate potential anthrax-mailers and other subversives with American citizenship. |
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His appeal to citizenship rights would be subjected to the jurisdiction of the national laws in whatever state he was residing. |
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Most Abkhazians and South Ossetians have taken out Russian citizenship and earn their living by trading with Russia. |
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But his request was rejected because he was stripped of Japanese citizenship when the war ended. |
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He might end up in prison, but, however long his sentence and however heinous his crime, his citizenship was secure. |
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Access to city spaces should be guaranteed by virtue of citizenship, but it is increasingly becoming a privilege conferred by status. |
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Being born in the US bestows US citizenship on the offspring and eliminates the obligatory military service requirement. |
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They will also have to sign a citizenship pledge as part of an oath of allegiance to the Queen and take part in US-style citizenship ceremonies. |
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The courts in this country, besides, have put their final stamp of authority on the authenticity of her citizenship. |
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I had a giant squee reaction to both of my countries of citizenship getting something right in the same week. |
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Anyone over the age of 18 with Iraqi citizenship is eligible to vote and there are 28,000 voting booths in 5,300 polling centres. |
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Many non-residents don't even apply for residency, and many residents don't apply for citizenship. |
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We try to keep their intensity and power alive as we learn the violent vocabulary of citizenship. |
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Although the Spartans extended their territory, they did not extend their citizenship. |
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A group of Bolton teachers are jetting off to Cape Town to find out how their South African counterparts are tackling the subject of citizenship. |
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The right to our citizenship, however, carries the duty to uphold our traditions. |
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Certainly, many immigrants who have been naturalised as British citizens wear their citizenship lightly. |
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The citizenship clause declares that anyone born or naturalized in the US is a citizen of the United States and of whatever state they reside in. |
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The existing oath of allegiance for people seeking British nationality is to be changed to a citizenship pledge. |
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Children of foreign nationals born prior to this date automatically received Irish citizenship. |
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Firstly, it will engage pupils from our own school, and from feeder primaries, in active citizenship work in their local community. |
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Self-assertion and a desire for autonomy are important components of genuine citizenship, as is a distrust of bossy authority. |
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The measure requires states to start issuing more uniform driver's licenses and to verify the citizenship or legal status of people getting them. |
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This understanding is as yet embryonic, unformed, nowhere near as solidly defined as citizenship was in the very recent past. |
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Our current citizenship laws are problematical but why go the sledgehammer route which will just whip up racism? |
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Certainly we do respectfully submit that citizenship is not a necessary condition of membership of the body politic. |
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Having a passport is a fundamental right of New Zealand citizenship and should not be mucked around with in that way. |
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Of citizenship and democracy, I have several unanswered questions going through my head. |
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My guest tonight says it is un-American in his view to deny these children American citizenship. |
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The government of San Marino should be advised the Flea stands ready for any offers of citizenship or professorial sinecures. |
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Furthermore, the idea of citizenship, once introduced, raised many troubling questions. |
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A Trini by adoption, in the course of my Caribbean travels I've acquired honorary citizenship in several other islands. |
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I suggest that many Americans misperceive the process of gaining citizenship, and think it's actually a lot easier than it proves to be. |
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Despite my family, citizenship and wavering mid-Atlantic Madonna accent I cannot claim to understand the English. |
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Tokelauans will retain New Zealand citizenship, and we will continue to provide aid and assistance. |
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Moreover, the fact that he wears a toga, another sign of Roman citizenship, confirms this reading of his legal status. |
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The government of Trinidad and Tobago does not allow for Trinidadians and Tobagonians to hold dual citizenship abroad. |
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He did his best, offering equal citizenship, collective solidarity, meritocracy and mutual respect as his core Party values. |
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My only direct dealing with the intelligence services was as a Minister of the Crown involved in a citizenship case. |
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In considering citizenship, we saw that it entailed more than simply a formal badge of membership in a national community. |
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In the twentieth century, a third strand of citizenship, social citizenship, emerged. |
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In Denmark, baptism in the state church had become a matter-of-course rite of citizenship. |
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Third, many of these chapters implicitly reduce changing forms of citizenship to a technicist definition of capitalism. |
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The number of legal immigrants, legal taxpaying immigrants, applying for U. S. citizenship more than doubled last year. |
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He will address questions about international law, economic sanctions and citizenship in light of the U.S. invasion of Iraq. |
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At home, womanhood was idealized and sanctified, while women themselves were denied such basic rights of citizenship as the vote. |
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If you haven't been to this icon of Australiana, rescind your citizenship immediately. |
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None of this atones for what he did earlier in his career to deny and delay the full rights of citizenship for black Americans. |
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No one seriously doubts that the citizenship provision adopted in 1998 has been roundly abused and should be changed. |
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Thanks to my mother, a lifelong Democrat from the swing state of Ohio, I have dual citizenship. |
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Just as the previous discrimination did, this reverse discrimination violates the public equality which defines citizenship. |
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Now, many fear we are chipping away at what it means to be an American, devaluing the citizenship those millions worked so hard to attain. |
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Because of their status they were allowed to apply for Irish citizenship after three-year residence. |
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Indeed, many people regard the very idea of group-differentiated citizenship as a contradiction in terms. |
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The conceptions of republicanism and citizenship were popularized by the upheavals of the American and French revolutions. |
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For other Latinas and Latinos, the bestowal of posthumous citizenship was bitterly ironic. |
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An additional two acts involve a citizen's formal and explicit renunciation of citizenship. |
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For example, if an American marries a Greek, the American also gets a Greek citizenship. |
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He is an American by citizenship and by his sworn allegiance to the laws of this land as a U.S. senator. |
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He has lived in the U.S.A. since 1966 but he has never relinquished his Canadian citizenship. |
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Over 98 percent of the 105,800 registrants voted for Indonesian citizenship last month. |
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People who do not have their citizenship documents must not be allowed to register to vote. |
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In modem societies the foundational institutions for membership are citizenship and alienage. |
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The role of A Vijayaraghavan, MP, was significant in securing Indian citizenship for these wretched people. |
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The government's reasons for proposing the citizenship referendum have shifted repeatedly since it was first announced. |
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The literature has not yielded many new proposals or recommendations on how to promote citizenship. |
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It is this creative act of citizenship that kindles hope and inspires action beyond bureaucratic bounds. |
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And I suggest that citizenship education needs to start by confronting the Janus-faced nature of people's anger, and making the most of it. |
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We are therefore digital citizens, but the new forms of digital citizenship are not automatically guaranteed for all nor is it sufficient to use new technologies to be or become responsible. |
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The consequences of a drug conviction amount to the annihilation of citizenship. |
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In particular, it applies to immigrants who lost their U.S. citizenship after their involvement in World War II was discovered. |
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His avowed goal had once been to get his American citizenship by boxing for the U.S. Olympic team and then turn pro. |
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Everyone wanted to be of use and no one knew how, as if citizenship were a skilled position for which none of us had the right experience and qualification. |
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And the people themselves can do it, abdicating the virtues and responsibilities of citizenship. |
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Immigration reform means a path to citizenship for people who came here illegally. |
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Why shouldn't we open our highest office to those who have adopted this country as their own and have proved their patriotism through decades of devoted citizenship? |
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Not long before Monsoon Wedding was released, the government of Prime Minister Tony Blair issued a White Paper, or statement of policy, on immigration and citizenship. |
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The British High Commission had a sharp increase in inquiries yesterday from whites seeking to readopt British citizenship following the violence. |
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But, again, the argument is sliding between considerations of a statutory concept, citizenship, and considerations of a constitutional concept, alienage. |
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In Japan, he has also expressed a wish to renounce his U.S. citizenship. |
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In Japan, he has also expressed his wish to renounce his U.S. citizenship. |
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Growing up with dual citizenship, Keshavarz is intimately acquainted with cultural schizophrenia. |
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It needs to voice and elevate an idea of democratic citizenship strong enough to block the growth of money in politics. |
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This organization feels that at a time when all countries are tightening their citizenship laws after the Sept 11 attack, India is thinking in the reverse direction. |
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Any revivification of active citizenship in Australia and elsewhere depends at least partly on the provision of the actual public infrastructure necessary for its realisation. |
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However, transportation also constituted citizenship as revocable, and it is significant that in its representation in Moll Flanders this aspect is revised. |
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And yet our country has redefined citizenship in some extraordinary ways since its inception. |
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For centuries, the forebears of men and women like Paul Peschkowsky were barred from citizenship and its rights. |
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It does not grant citizenship or the right to stay here permanently, or offer the same benefits that citizens receive. |
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Endorsing a path to citizenship for DREAM Act recipients is fine, but small potatoes. |
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Canada and the United States are the only industrialized countries that retain birthright citizenship. |
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But as a reason to renounce my citizenship, it's a thin one. |
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There's a controversial proposal under debate in New York City now that would give non-citizens a protected privilege of American citizenship, the right to vote. |
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Each was then presented with an information pack about Swindon, a small tiepin bearing Swindon's coat of arms and their certificate of citizenship. |
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The Panama hat came to signify secular Turkish citizenship and functions as a metonym for the transformation of the Oriental Ottoman to the Western Turk. |
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At first the committee had to work covertly as under the Neutrality Acts an American could lose his citizenship if he fought in the armed forces of a belligerent power. |
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Mark had naturalized as a citizen when his mother gained her citizenship. |
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The aim of this exercise, one has to believe, is to maneuver Moscow into the circle of good global citizenship. |
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But if the second marriage was bigamous and therefore invalid, then FPJ would be illegitimate and should follow his mother's, not his father's, citizenship. |
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Chaplin had not taken US citizenship and was seen in America as ungrateful for the prosperity that his successful career in the US had bestowed upon him. |
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Residents of unincorporated territories were not granted U.S. citizenship. |
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Some nations confer citizenship if you marry a national of that country. |
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Those eligible for naturalisation should be granted citizenship. |
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Come Australia Day, the family of five will officially call Australia home when they are naturalised at the citizenship ceremony to be held at the Aquarena. |
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If white people were required to use tanning beds as a condition of their citizenship, yoho might have a point. |
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The demands of modern citizenship require an upsizing of society. |
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In June 1976, the territory's citizenship law, which favored the Afar minority, was revised to reflect more closely the weight of the Issa Somali. |
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The Daily Telegraph reports that the new test required of applicants for British citizenship requires knowledge of where the different dialects of British English are spoken. |
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A South African woman, who did not want to be named, became the second person in the county to be awarded citizenship in the new ceremony, introduced this year. |
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Niueans kept their New Zealand citizenship, where 20,000 now live. |
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The only reasons accepted for non-participation are foreign citizenship, a severe chronic medical condition, or a handicap documented in a medical certificate. |
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All the while the citizenship issue was hanging over my head. |
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In 2002 they led a spectacular parade through Skipton when Craven District Council conferred honorary citizenship of the district upon the regiment. |
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Most of the population of two million people were not granted citizenship. |
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Moreover, children born in the UK to non-British citizens do not acquire British citizenship unless they can satisfy the requirements of patriality. |
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Another is the attention he pays to clientship and how this differs from citizenship in placing people in vertical rather than horizontal ties of trust and obligation. |
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Yet the government, having arbitrarily detained him for two years, is coercing him into giving up his citizenship by the threat of further arbitrary detention. |
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Cadets as young as 11 wear uniforms, learn about military history and citizenship, listen to lectures about preventing drug abuse, and perform in a color guard. |
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They organized politically to win citizenship rights from the state. |
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In fee-paying schools, almost all students come from a family background where there is a great deal of emphasis on achievement and good citizenship. |
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Beginning Oct.1, 2004, the new law allows for U.S. citizenship applications to be finalized at U.S. embassies, consulates and selected military bases overseas. |
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Yet, this pan-Canadian construction of citizenship was contested, particularly in Quebec where French Canadians did not feel comfortable in the new Canadian nation. |
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The widespread ambivalence over whether the sons and daughters of Egyptian women married to foreign men should be allowed Egyptian citizenship assumed many dimensions. |
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Not the least important aspect of those developments is the role of minority ethnic communities themselves in pressing their claim for full and effective citizenship. |
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After the war Popov was decorated and awarded British citizenship. |
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Since we are far from a global citizenship, we are aware of the fact that a status grounded on denizenship will also exclude some residents in Europe. |
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The idea that questions of nationality and citizenship could be solved by brutal population elimination inspired a generation of the most toxic extremists or eliminationists. |
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The concept of digital citizenship highlights the continued need for policy that promotes effective use of the internet, including literacy, skills, and regular access. |
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Digital citizenship can refer to how people work through the World Wide Web, across geographic boundaries, to identify injustices or solve problems together. |
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Everybody can live and work in Svalbard indefinitely regardless of citizenship. |
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The film star, who held British citizenship, died at the age of 63 from appendicular cancer. |
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The approximately 250,000 people of the British overseas territories are British by citizenship, via origins or naturalisation. |
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In the past, most people were excluded from citizenship on the basis of gender, socioeconomic class, ethnicity, religion, and other factors. |
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This distinction between full citizenship and other, lesser relationships goes back to antiquity. |
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Nationality is required for full citizenship, and some people have nationality without having full citizenship. |
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The term has no definite legal connotation, but is used in law to refer to United Kingdom citizenship and matters to do with nationality. |
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In the modern era, the concept of full citizenship encompasses not only active political rights, but full civil rights and social rights. |
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A state of isopolity existed when the citizenship of one city was made equivalent to that of another, and vice versa. |
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Conceptually, citizenship is focused on the internal political life of the state and nationality is a matter of international dealings. |
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Besides a share in the hotel, applicants, if they pass due diligence tests, are also entitled to citizenship in Dominica. |
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From 1830 to 1946, only between 3,000 and 6,000 native Algerians were granted French citizenship. |
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This was interpreted by some Muslims as requiring them to give up parts of their religion to obtain citizenship and was resented. |
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Sidiq Ahmad Osmani, an MP from Parwan province, opposed to casting trust vote for dual citizenship ministers. |
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Murray has dual citizenship, which his lawyer says will prevent him being sent back here. |
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The Irish runner was cleared to compete for Australia in Melbourne after being granted dual citizenship last month. |
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He now has a dual citizenship and he has not renounced his British citizenship. |
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Nationality differs technically and legally from citizenship, which is a different legal relationship between a person and a country. |
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This dual citizenship enables him to return to the Philippines as a balikbayan. |
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If such a person subsequently applies for British citizenship by registration or naturalisation, attendance at a ceremony is required. |
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The forms must be sent through the UK Border Agency's citizenship renunciation process. |
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Where such a person acquired a right of abode in the UK before 1983, it is possible for British citizenship to have been acquired. |
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They have Irish citizenship but belong to Igbo cultural associations around the country. |
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Indonesia's House of Representatives on Tuesday enacted a law on citizenship that recognizes Chinese-Indonesians as ''indigenous'' Indonesians. |
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The Norwegian government offers language instructional courses for immigrants wishing to obtain Norwegian citizenship. |
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Where applicants in such cases confirm that they still wish to receive British citizenship, the decision is reconsidered on request. |
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In other cases, certain persons may already hold British citizenship as a matter of entitlement or through registration under normal procedures. |
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Registration is a simpler method of acquiring citizenship than naturalisation, but only certain people are eligible. |
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The cancellation or annulment of an adoption order does not cause loss of British citizenship acquired by that adoption. |
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This is the standard method for children adopted by British citizens permanently resident overseas to acquire British citizenship. |
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Rules for acquiring British citizenship by descent depend on when the person was born. |
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Rather than furnishing an education in citizenship, it offers an education in anticitizenship. |
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Information about British citizenship and other kinds of British nationality is available from Her Majesty's Government. |
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To reduce de facto statelessness, most are allowed to be registered as British citizens provided holding no other citizenship or nationality. |
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British nationality law is the law of the United Kingdom which concerns citizenship and other categories of British nationality. |
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From the point of view of the individual, denaturalization means revocation or loss of citizenship. |
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Denaturalization is the reverse of naturalization, when a state deprives one of its citizens of his or her citizenship. |
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The 1922 Cable Act specified that women marrying aliens ineligible for naturalization lose their US citizenship. |
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The minister can also grant citizenship to minors, if their parent applies for them. |
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Even after meeting all the requirements and going through the naturalization process, the minister holds the right to deny citizenship. |
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The Indian citizenship and nationality law and the Constitution of India provides single citizenship for the entire country. |
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The country also gives citizenship to people born on its territory to stateless people who have settled there. |
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Full British citizenship was soon returned to the people of Gibraltar having regard to the friction with Spain. |
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One aspect of Roman influence seen in British life was the grant of Roman citizenship. |
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The number of citizens steadily increased, as people inherited citizenship and more grants were made. |
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Eventually in 212, everybody except slaves and freed slaves were granted citizenship by the Constitutio Antoniniana. |
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The other inhabitants of Britain, who did not enjoy citizenship, the Peregrini, continued to live under the laws of their ancestors. |
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But for the majority of British inhabitants, who were peasants tied to the soil, citizenship would not dramatically alter their daily lives. |
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Four patterns emerge in the analysis of racialized and gendered citizenship discourses with respect to Asian American women and men. |
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In 2008, France granted citizenship to 137,000 persons, mostly to people from Morocco, Algeria and Turkey. |
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Around the age of six, children transfer to elementary school, whose primary objectives are learning about writing, arithmetic and citizenship. |
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In 2008, Spain granted citizenship to 84,170 persons, mostly to people from Ecuador, Colombia and Morocco. |
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It has a friendship alliance and dual citizenship treaty with its former colony, Brazil. |
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Its Law of Return grants the right of citizenship to any Jew who requests it. |
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Taney, the decision effectively barred slaves and their descendants from citizenship. |
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The town had been conquered by the Romans in the late 4th century BC and was given Roman citizenship without voting rights. |
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Hamburg residents with a foreign citizenship as of 31 December 2016 is as follows. |
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Cologne residents with a foreign citizenship as of 31 December 2015 is as follows. |
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Instead the 'cultural turn' encouraged historians to explore wartime constructions of gender, race, citizenship and national identity. |
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Thus, francophonie, or the speaking of French, must not be confused with French citizenship or ethnicity. |
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In France, the conception of citizenship teeters between universalism and multiculturalism, especially in recent years. |
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This universalist conception of citizenship and of the nation has influenced the French model of colonization. |
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The 1992 Maastricht Treaty introduced the concept of European citizenship, which comes in addition to national citizenships. |
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On 1 January 1947, Canadian citizenship was conferred on most British subjects connected with Canada. |
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However, statistics of the Finnish population according to first language and citizenship are documented and available. |
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Military service often was linked with citizenship among the male members of the royal house. |
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Today, the official criterion for being a Dane is having a Danish citizenship. |
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Danish citizenship is granted to anyone who has one parent of Danish citizenship, whether the child is born in or outside Denmark. |
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For example, rights to dual citizenship may be generous, or larger immigrant quotas may be extended to former colonies. |
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Spanish nationality law requires a period of residency in Spain before citizenship can be applied for. |
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Since 2007, the Puerto Rico State Department has developed a protocol to issue certificates of Puerto Rican citizenship to Puerto Ricans. |
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Without international recognition, any Pridnestrovians needing to travel internationally must accept Moldovan citizenship and its passport. |
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Over 200,000 free blacks and newly freed slaves fought for the Union in the Army and Navy, thereby validating their claims to full citizenship. |
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Sometimes citizens become ineligible to vote because they are no longer resident in their country of citizenship. |
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In most cases this was because there was no distinction between British and local citizenship. |
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If the succession is universal, they can become stateless as the state they held citizenship to ceases to exist. |
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After the coup, Marx lost his Prussian citizenship, was deported, and fled to Paris and then London. |
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In 1796, after taking American citizenship, Brunel was appointed Chief Engineer of the city of New York. |
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Liberal learning is said to prepare one for autonomy and for citizenship. |
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The party will be a celebration of volunteer work camps, global citizenship and UNA Exchange's 40th anniversary. |
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Before 212, for the most part only inhabitants of Italia held full Roman citizenship. |
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However, in individual cases, Claudius punished false assumption of citizenship harshly, making it a capital offense. |
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He had helped increase this number through the foundation of Roman colonies that were granted blanket citizenship. |
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Lagat said he started the citizenship process in late 2003 and did not expect to become an American citizen until after the Athens games. |
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He joined the Air Force about two years ago and said citizenship is a requirement to re-enlist. |
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The granting of citizenship to allies and the conquered was a vital step in the process of Romanization. |
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This, according to Ngai, is the result of other scholars projecting their own valorizations of formal citizenship onto the renunciants. |
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Roman citizenship was required in order to enlist in the Roman legions, but this was sometimes ignored. |
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Before 212, for the most part only inhabitants of Italy held full Roman citizenship. |
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The Lex Calpurnia, however, also allowed citizenship to be granted for distinguished bravery. |
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The Kenyan constitution requires that one renounce their Kenyan citizenship when they become a citizen of another nation. |
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Following the Battle of Vercellae in 101 BC, Marius granted all Italian soldiers Roman citizenship. |
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The legal status of free persons might be further defined by their citizenship. |
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In 212, during the reign of Caracalla, Roman citizenship was granted to all freeborn inhabitants of the empire. |
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Gaius then proposed a law which would grant citizenship rights to Rome's Italian allies. |
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The IOC is only concerned with issues of citizenship and nationality after individual nations have granted citizenship to athletes. |
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If they are born in Finland and cannot get citizenship of any other country, they become citizens. |
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In this case, the applicant may sign an affidavit of citizenship or be required to present a birth certificate. |
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Al-Sabeeh noted that the GCC is ready to address social problems such as those related to the issues of belongingness, identity and citizenship. |
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His childhood was split between London and Evanston, Illinois, and he has both British and American citizenship. |
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The basic document needed to establish a person's identity and citizenship in order to obtain a passport is a birth certificate. |
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The passport card can be used as a valid proof of citizenship and proof of identity both inside and outside the United States. |
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The next year, his wife renounced her US citizenship and became a British citizen. |
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He lived in the city of Alexandria in the Roman province of Egypt, wrote in Koine Greek, and held Roman citizenship. |
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In 1953, Huxley and Maria applied for United States citizenship and presented themselves for examination. |
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Nonetheless, a document stating citizenship, such as a national identity card or an Enhanced Drivers License, is usually required. |
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Belloc became a naturalised British subject in 1902, while retaining his French citizenship. |
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Foreign Muslims who have resided in the kingdom for ten years may apply for Saudi citizenship. |
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