Information AboutCitizen |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT CITIZENSHIP | |
| human migration | |
| nationality | |
| government | |
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Citizenship is membership in a political community (originally a City or town but now usually a Country ) and carries with it Rights to political participation; a person having such membership is a '''citizen'''. It is largely coterminous with Nationality , although it is possible to have a nationality without being a citizen (i.e., be legally subject to a state and entitled to its protection without having rights of political participation in it); it is also possible to have political rights without being a national of a state. In most nations, a non-citizen is a non-national and called either a ''foreigner'' or an ''alien''. In the United States, because there is state citizenship, ''foreign'' is the legal term for someone not a citizen of the state, and ''alien'' is reserved for someone not a citizen of the United States. Thus New York insurance companies are foreign in New Jersey, while a Dutch insurer is alien. See Nationality for further discussion of the properties of national citizenship and how it can be acquired. Citizenship, which is explained above, is the political rights of an individual within a society. Thus, you can have a citizenship from one country and be a national of another country. One example might be as follows: A Cuban-American might be considered a national of Cuba due to his being born there, but he could also become an American citizen through naturalization. Nationality most often derives from place of birth (i.e. '' Jus Soli '') and, in some cases, ethnicity (i.e. '' Jus Sanguinis ''). Citizenship derives from a legal relationship with a state. Citizenship can be lost, as in Denaturalization , and gained, as in Naturalization . |
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