Friday, September 7, 2012

Information Regarding Consulate Registration of Birth and Dual Citizenship

By Pedro Montesino


This content explains the way to getting a consular registration of birth and explains US dual citizenship laws.

Consular Registration of Birth:

Certificates of consular registration of birth are issued by a US consulate abroad. If your parents were US citizens but were not physically in the USA when you were born, they could have registered your birth with a US consulate to prove your right to United States citizenship and created an official birth record. To obtain a "certificate of consular birth registration", your parents should have registered your birth at a consulate within 5 years of your birth.

Multiple copies may be issued during the time of registration but duplicates can not be obtained later. Therefore, parents should request at the least several copies. In issuing the certificate, the consulate requests to see evidence that any residence requirements the law places on your parents were fulfilled. The consular registration is definite proof of United States citizenship, yet, if your parents failed to take the steps to acquire one while you were a child there is no way to obtain one now.

If your parents did not register your birth in time, you may either apply for a passport through a US passport office or at an American consulate abroad, or you may apply for a certificate of citizenship through the USCIS in the United States. You can typically get the passport much faster than the certificate of citizenship.

Information Regarding Dual Citizenship:

If a child is born on American soil and either or both parents are citizens of a different country, it is extremely probable that the child may have dual citizenship. Whether or not dual citizenship is created depends on the laws belonging to the parent's country or countries.

A child born in the United States of America is always a American citizen from the perspective of the United States of America government, regardless of what the laws of the parent's homeland say. (The sole exception to his rule is children born to foreign diplomats).

Whenever a child is born to US citizen parents but the birth takes place outside US territory, the child may acquire dual citizenship. In this situation, the child will, depending on the laws of the country where the birth took place, usually have the nationality of the country in which he or she was actually born, in addition to US citizenship through the nationality of the parents. US law recognizes dual citizenship under these situation, and if you have acquired dual citizenship in this manner, under US law you will be entitled to maintain dual status for your lifetime.

Lastly , a person who becomes a US citizen through naturalization can retain dual citizenship if their country allows double citizenship. If you're considering seeking US naturalization, check with the embassy of your home country to find out whether this might impact your legal status in your nation of origin.




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