Citizenship
Thursday, 22 April 2004 21:11I've talked it over with Stella and it looks as if the child will only be German.
It would be possible for the child to acquire British citizenship if we moved there later and lived in the UK for at least three years, though that might cause it to lose German citizenship unless it applies for a special dispensation.
Maybe it's for the best—there's no telling how much English it'll pick up, and it'll never have lived there.
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Date: Thursday, 22 April 2004 21:40 (UTC)What are you guys up to?
(j/k)- hope everything works out.. Britcit is extremely useful to have. But I don't think you should have to give up the country you were born in..
Let me know what happens..
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Date: Thursday, 22 April 2004 22:20 (UTC)I imagine for similar reasons to why the US discourages dual citizenship: because of problems it may cause when two countries have claim on a person. I couldn't tell you for sure, though.
Britcit is extremely useful to have.
Hm. Though inside the EU, it's not much of a muchness since citizens of member countries have pretty much the same rights in any other EU country.
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Date: Friday, 23 April 2004 01:41 (UTC)Anyway, all the best in your decision. I've found tho, that kids never know what they want until it's too late. I vote speak to them in both languages from birth, if they choose not to speak them later- that's up to them. But as someone whose parents only spoke English, now I'd give anything to have grown up in a bi-language family.. I'm going to have to learn my languages the hard way-- total immersion in the country! :S
Have a fabulous weekend, and on Monday when we have our public holiday, I'll spend a few moments thinking of my friends around the world stuck at work...
but I'll probably forget :)
no subject
Date: Friday, 23 April 2004 08:10 (UTC)