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Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| short_title | Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act |
| type | Act |
| long_title | An Act to make provision about nationality, immigration and asylum; to create offences in connection with international traffic in prostitution; to make provision about international projects connected with migration; and for connected purposes. |
| year | 2002 |
| citation | 2002 c. 41 |
| territorial_extent | United Kingdom |
| royal_assent | 7 November 2002 |
| status | Amended |
| use_new_UK-LEG | yes |
|use_new_UK-LEG = yes |UK-LEG_title =
The Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 (c. 41) is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It received royal assent on 7 November 2002.
Provisions
British Nationals with no other citizenship
The act granted British Overseas Citizens, British Subjects and British Protected Persons the right to register as British citizens if they have no other citizenship or nationality and have not after 4 July 2002 renounced, voluntarily relinquished or lost through action or inaction any citizenship or nationality.
Overseas born children of British mothers
The Act has also conferred a right to registration as a British citizen on persons born between 8 February 1961 and 31 December 1982 who, but for the inability (at that time) of women to pass on their citizenship, would have acquired British citizenship automatically when the British Nationality Act 1981 came into force.
Deprivation of British nationality
Under amendments made by the act to the British Nationality Act 1981, British nationals can be deprived of their citizenship if the Secretary of State is satisfied they are responsible for acts seriously prejudicial to the vital interests of the United Kingdom or an Overseas Territory. This power is restricted to individuals who have dual citizenship.
Citizenship ceremonies
The act established citizenship ceremonies. This requires swearing allegiance or affirming allegiance to the King and a pledging loyalty to the United Kingdom.
English language requirements
The act established applicants have a certain standard of English language proficiency.
Life in the United Kingdom test
Children of unmarried British fathers
With effect from 1 July 2006, children may acquire British citizenship automatically from an unmarried British father (or a British permanent resident if the child is born in the United Kingdom). Proof of paternity must be shown.
As of 6 April 2015, a person over 18 years of age who was born out of wedlock before 1 July 2006 to a British father is entitled to register as a British citizen by descent under the Immigration Act 2014 using form UKF. Such child must also meet character requirements, pay relevant processing fees and attend a citizenship ceremony.
References
References
- Johnston, Philip. (2002-07-05). "UK overseas citizens win right to live in Britain". [[The Daily Telegraph]].
- Norton, Emma. (2010-01-21). "Why can't I claim British citizenship?". [[The Guardian]].
- Scalvini, Marco. (2013-03-15). "The secret war: British nationals stripped of their citizenship". OpenDemocracy UK.
- (2009-01-19). "Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Act 2006". [[The Guardian]].
- Jones, Alun. (2023-05-05). "Welsh language oath asks people to curse at God". BBC News.
- (2002-02-07). "INTEGRATION WITH DIVERSITY IN MODERN BRITAIN: NATIONALITY, IMMIGRATION & ASYLUM WHITE PAPER PUBLISHED". [[Local Government Chronicle]].
- Stone, Jon. (2022-06-30). "Home Office must urgently fix ‘joke’ UK citizenship test, committee says". The Independent.
- (2002-04-12). "TRUST AND CONFIDENCE IN OUR NATIONALITY, IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM SYSTEM, BILL PUBLISHED". Local Government Chronicle.
- "S65 of Immigration Act 2014".
- "Register as a British citizen: Born before 1 July 2006 to a British father".
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