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Australian nationality law

Australian nationality law details the conditions by which a person is a national of Australia. The primary law governing nationality regulations is the Australian Citizenship Act 2007, which came into force on 1 July 2007 and is applicable in all states and territories of Australia.

Australian Citizenship Act 2007
Parliament of Australia
  • An Act relating to Australian citizenship
CitationNo. 20 of 2007
Territorial extentAustralia
Enacted byHouse of Representatives
Enacted1 March 2007 (with amendments from the Senate)
Enacted bySenate
Enacted26 February 2007
Royal assent15 March 2007
Commenced1 July 2007
Administered byDepartment of Home Affairs[1]
Legislative history
First chamber: House of Representatives
Bill titleAustralian Citizenship Bill 2005
Introduced byJohn Cobb
First reading9 November 2005
Second reading28 November 2006
Third reading28 November 2006
Second chamber: Senate
Bill titleAustralian Citizenship Bill 2006
Member in ChargeIan Campbell
First reading30 November 2006
Second reading26 February 2007
Third reading26 February 2007[2]
Repeals
Australian Citizenship Act 1948
Status: Amended

All persons born in Australia before 20 August 1986 were automatically citizens at birth regardless of the nationalities of their parents. Individuals born in the country after that date receive Australian citizenship at birth if at least one of their parents is an Australian citizen or permanent resident. Children born in Australia to New Zealand citizens since 1 July 2022 also receive Australian citizenship at birth. Foreign nationals may be granted citizenship after living in the country for at least four years, holding permanent residency for one year, and showing proficiency in the English language.

Australia is composed of several former British colonies founded in the 18th and 19th centuries whose residents were British subjects. After federation as a Dominion within the British Empire in 1901, Australia was granted more autonomy over time and gradually became independent from the United Kingdom. Although Australian citizens have no longer been British subjects since 1984, they continue to hold favoured status when residing in the UK. As Commonwealth citizens, Australians are eligible to vote in UK elections and serve in public office there.

Terminology edit

The distinction between the meaning of the terms citizenship and nationality is not always clear in the English language and differs by country. Generally, nationality refers a person's legal belonging to a state and is the common term used in international treaties when referring to members of that polity; citizenship refers to the set of rights and duties a person has in that nation.[3] Despite this distinction, the Australian Government uses these two terms interchangeably.[4]

Colonial-era history edit

Fragmented development edit

Britain established its first colony in Australia with the founding of New South Wales in 1788. Over the course of the 19th century, the British presence expanded throughout the continent. By 1890, there were six separate self-governing territories in Australia.[5] British nationality law applied to each of these colonies, as was the case elsewhere in the British Empire. Australians and all other imperial citizens were British subjects;[6] any person born in the Australian colonies, the United Kingdom, or anywhere else within Crown dominions was a natural-born British subject.[7]

British nationality law during this time was uncodified and did not have a standard set of regulations,[8] relying instead on precedent and common law.[9] Until the mid-19th century, it was unclear whether naturalisation rules in the United Kingdom were applicable in other parts of the Empire. Each colony had wide discretion in developing their own procedures and requirements for admitting foreign settlers as subjects.[10] New South Wales and Tasmania respectively enacted legislation in 1828 and 1834 enabling denization, a process that partially granted foreign citizens the rights of British subjects, most notably property rights.[11] Denizens were not considered aliens, but could not pass subject status to their children by descent and were barred from Crown service and public office.[12]

Naturalisation in Britain was achieved through individual Acts of Parliament until 1844, when a more streamlined administrative process was introduced. The Australian colonies emulated this system in their own naturalisation legislation, which was enacted in all local legislatures by 1871.[11] In 1847, the Imperial Parliament formalised a clear distinction between subjects who naturalised in the UK and those who did so in other territories. Individuals who naturalised in the UK were deemed to have received the status by imperial naturalisation, which was valid throughout the Empire. Those naturalising in colonies were said to have gone through local naturalisation and were given subject status valid only within the relevant territory;[13] a subject who locally naturalised in New South Wales was a British subject there, but not in England or Victoria. Nevertheless, locally naturalised British subjects were still entitled to imperial protection when travelling outside of the Empire.[14]

Married women generally followed the nationality status of their husbands. Beginning with New South Wales in 1848, each colony enacted legislation that automatically naturalised foreign women who married British subjects, mirroring regulations enacted in the UK in 1844. After Britain established marital denaturalisation for British subject women who married non-British men in 1870, New South Wales adapted its rules to match this in 1875. The other Australian colonies did not adopt this in legislation but in practice, women who married foreign men were automatically stripped of British subject status throughout Australia.[15]

The Federal Council of Australasia, created in 1885, was a first attempt at forming a unified governing body in the region and consisted of four Australian colonies (Queensland, Tasmania, Victoria, and Western Australia), along with Fiji.[16] Legislation passed by the Federal Council in 1897 allowed British subjects who had naturalised in a colony under its authority to be considered as naturalised in other such colonies.[17]

Discriminatory policies against Indigenous Australians and non-European migrants edit

Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders became British subjects as the colonies were settled throughout the continent,[18] but actual participation in colonial society and access to civil rights was limited. In Queensland and Western Australia, franchise qualification for an Indigenous person was dependent on their ownership of land that was valued at least £100, which was prohibitively expensive for the time and barred virtually all such persons from voting.[19] While there were no specific restrictions in legislation on Indigenous voting in the other colonies, other regulatory barriers often prevented exercising that right. Between 1858 and 1926, New South Wales disqualified persons receiving aid from "any public charitable institution" from voting registration; anyone living in Aboriginal reserves were considered to be receiving aid. Some exceptions were afforded to landholders and "half-caste" Aboriginals.[20]

Immigration from Asia began in the 1840s, when Chinese workers were invited to work in New South Wales due to a labour shortage. Although these labourers were met with almost immediate disapproval, the Australian gold rushes beginning in the 1850s attracted a steady wave of further migration. Growing hostility and anti-Chinese sentiment led to severe social unrest and violent confrontations during the Lambing Flat riots in 1861. Following this, New South Wales imposed substantial restrictions on Chinese entry.[21] Regulations varied by colony but clearly favoured immigrants of European descent over members of any other ethnic groups. Queensland created two different sets of requirements in 1867 for naturalisation of "Asiatic and African aliens" and "European and North American aliens". Asian and African applicants seeking to become subjects were required to have lived in the colony for three years, and be married and living together with their wives.[22] Chinese migrants were specifically targeted in colonial legislation that charged fees for entry to or residence in the colonies, and banned them from naturalising as British subjects. In 1889, entrance fees for Chinese in each of the Australasian colonies were standardised at £10, except for Queensland which required £30.[23]

Post-federation policies edit

The Federal Council of Australasia was abolished in 1900[24] and replaced on 1 January 1901 by the Commonwealth of Australia,[25] a federation of the six Australian colonies. The status of Australians as British subjects (including Indigenous Australians) remained unchanged despite the creation of this union.[26][18] Commonwealth nationality legislation enacted in 1903 superseded laws of the new states; naturalisation in one of the states became automatically valid in all of them.[27]

The federal government continued and extended restrictions on persons of non-European descent as part of its White Australia policy. The Immigration Restriction Act 1901 created the legal basis for administering dictation tests in any European language as determined by an immigration officer. Any person who failed was denied entry into Australia.[28] While Māori from New Zealand technically fell under the exclusion criteria of this Act, representations made by the New Zealand government pressured the Commonwealth government into exceptionally relaxing restrictions for Māori.[29] The Naturalization Act 1903 explicitly prohibited naturalisation of anyone with ancestry from Africa, Asia, or Oceania (except New Zealand).[30] Indigenous Australians who did not already have their names placed on a state electoral roll on the date of federation were largely prohibited from enrolling to vote in federal elections from 1902 to 1962.[31]

Imperial common code edit

The Imperial Parliament brought regulations for British subject status into codified statute law for the first time with passage of the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act 1914. British subject status was standardised as a common nationality across the Empire. Dominions that adopted this Act as part of local legislation were authorised to grant subject status to aliens by imperial naturalisation.[32][33] Australia adopted the common code in 1920.[25]

The 1914 regulations codified the doctrine of coverture into imperial nationality law, where a woman's consent to marry a foreign national was also assumed to be intent to denaturalise; British women who married foreign men automatically lost their British nationality. There were two exceptions to this: a wife married to a husband who lost his British subject status was able to retain British nationality by declaration, and a British-born widow or divorcée who had lost her British nationality through marriage could reacquire that status without meeting residence requirements after the dissolution of her marriage.[34]

Australia's version of the common code regulations contained extensive measures for revoking British subject status from naturalised persons. Individuals who showed disloyalty to the monarch, were sentenced to imprisonment for at least one year or received a fine of more than £100 within five years of naturalising, had been deemed to be "not of good character" when subject status was granted, or lived outside of the British Empire for more than seven years were liable to have their naturalisation revoked.[35]

Unlike the 1903 Act, the common code enacted in 1920 did not explicitly bar migrants on the basis of race. It instead allowed the government to deny naturalisation to any person without cause. Only 45 people of Asian descent were naturalised between 1904 and 1953.[30] Migrants of non-European ancestry were effectively barred from permanent residency and naturalisation until 1957.[36]

By the end of the First World War, the Dominions had exercised increasing levels of autonomy in managing their own affairs and each by then had developed a distinct national identity. Britain formally recognised this at the 1926 Imperial Conference, jointly issuing the Balfour Declaration with all the Dominion heads of government, which stated that the United Kingdom and Dominions were autonomous and equal to each other within the British Commonwealth of Nations. Full legislative independence was granted to the Dominions with passage of the Statute of Westminster 1931.[37]

Women's rights groups throughout the Empire pressured the imperial government during this time to amend nationality regulations that tied a married woman's status to that of her husband.[38] Because the British government could no longer enforce legislative supremacy over the Dominions after 1931 and wanted to maintain a strong constitutional link to them through the common nationality code, it was unwilling to make major changes without unanimous agreement among the Dominions on this issue, which it did not have.[39] Imperial legal uniformity was nevertheless eroded during the 1930s; New Zealand and Australia amended their laws in 1935 and 1936 to allow women denaturalised by marriage to retain their rights as British subjects, and Ireland changed its regulations in 1935 to cause no change to a woman's nationality after her marriage.[40]

Australian citizenship created edit

Diverging developments in Dominion nationality laws, as well as growing assertions of local national identity separate from that of Britain and the Empire, culminated with the creation of Canadian citizenship in 1946, unilaterally breaking the system of a common imperial nationality. Combined with the approaching independence of India and Pakistan in 1947, comprehensive nationality law reform was necessary at this point to address ideas that were incompatible with the previous system.[41] The Dominion governments agreed on the principle of equal standing for women in a reformed nationality system at the 1946 Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference and Australia amended its law to grant equal nationality rights in that same year.[42]

Australia enacted the Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948 to create its own citizenship, which came into force on 26 January 1949,[43] shortly after the British Nationality Act 1948 became effective throughout the Empire on 1 January 1949.[44] All British subjects who were born, naturalised, or resident for at least five years in Australia automatically acquired Australian citizenship on that date.[36][45] British subjects born to a father who himself was born or naturalised in Australia[36] and British subject women who were married to someone qualifying as an Australian citizen also automatically acquired citizenship on that date.[46]

All other noncitizens could acquire citizenship by naturalisation after fulfilling a general residence requirement. Candidates must have resided in Australia (including Papua) or New Guinea for at least four of the previous eight years, with one year of continuous residence immediately preceding an application. This was reduced to two of the previous eight years in 1973.[47][48] Non-Europeans were allowed to apply for residency and naturalisation from 1957, if they were legally admitted and living in Australia for 15 years (reduced to five years in 1966).[49]

Almost all provisions to revoke citizenship from naturalised individuals were repealed in 1958.[35] On the other hand, Australian citizens who acquired a foreign citizenship other than through marriage were automatically denaturalised and lost their Australian citizenship under this Act. Individuals who naturalised as Australian citizens conversely were not required to renounce their previous nationalities.[50]

Restrictions on Indigenous Australian rights were relaxed in 1949, when eligibility to enrol in federal elections was extended to any Indigenous Australian who was already enrolled to vote in state elections or had been a member of the armed forces.[51] Voting eligibility was extended to all Indigenous Australians in 1962,[52] and following a 1967 referendum, they began to be included as part of state population counts in each national census.[53]

Reform and abolition of British subject status edit

The 1948 Act redefined the term British subject as any citizen of Australia or another Commonwealth country. Commonwealth citizen is defined in this Act to have the same meaning.[54] British subject/Commonwealth citizen status co-existed with the citizenships of each Commonwealth country.[55][56] Irish citizens were treated as if they were British subjects, despite Ireland's exit from the Commonwealth in 1949.[57] All Commonwealth citizens were eligible to become Australian citizens by registration, rather than naturalisation, after residing in Australia for at least five of the preceding seven years. Commonwealth citizens who became Australian citizens by registration were not required to swear an oath of allegiance because they were already subjects of the Crown.[58]

All British subjects under the reformed system initially held an automatic right to settle in the United Kingdom and Ireland.[59][60] Non-white immigration into the UK was systemically discouraged, but strong economic conditions in Britain following the Second World War attracted an unprecedented wave of colonial migration.[61] In response, the British Parliament imposed immigration controls on any subjects originating from outside the British Islands with the Commonwealth Immigrants Act 1962.[62] Ireland had continued to allow all British subjects free movement despite independence in 1922 as part of the Common Travel Area arrangement, but moved to mirror Britain's restriction in 1962 by limiting this ability only to people born on the islands of Great Britain or Ireland.[63][60] Britain somewhat relaxed these measures in 1971 for patrials, subjects whose parents or grandparents were born in the United Kingdom,[62] which gave effective preferential treatment to white Commonwealth citizens.[64]

As a sign of Australia's changing relationship with Britain, Australian passports were no longer labelled with the phrase "British passport" beginning in 1967.[65] Legislative changes in 1969 meant that Australian citizens technically ceased to be British subjects in that year, but retained "the status of British subjects" instead.[66][67] Preferences that were afforded to citizens from other Commonwealth countries and restrictions on migrants of non-European descent were abolished in a further 1973 amendment.[49] The name of the Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948 itself changed to the Australian Citizenship Act 1948 in 1973 as well;[68] the anniversary of this event has been celebrated since 2001 as Australian Citizenship Day.[69]

By the 1970s and 1980s, most colonies of the British Empire had become independent and remaining ties to the United Kingdom had been significantly weakened.[70] The UK itself updated its nationality law to reflect the more modest boundaries of its remaining territory and possessions with the British Nationality Act 1981,[70] which redefined British subject to no longer also mean Commonwealth citizen. Australian citizens remain Commonwealth citizens in British law[71] and are still eligible to vote and stand for public office in the UK.[72]

Further reforms in 1984 fully abolished British subject status in Australian law[67] and removed remaining gender imbalances in nationality regulations.[73][74] Voting eligibility rules were changed to require Australian citizenship instead of British subject status, but any British subject without citizenship already enrolled to vote before 26 January 1984 had the right to continue participating in elections. Noncitizen British subjects could no longer apply for Australian passports beginning in that year.[75]

After passage of the Australia Act 1986, the High Court has considered any persons without Australian citizenship to be aliens. While British subjects could not have been considered foreign at the time of federation, the severing of constitutional ties with the United Kingdom created a definitive separation between the two countries; British citizens have since been considered subjects of a foreign power and are ineligible to serve in the Parliament of Australia under section 44 of the Constitution of Australia.[76] The eligibility of 10 sitting legislators was questioned under this section of the Constitution during the 2017–18 Australian parliamentary eligibility crisis, leading to eight disqualifications under subsequent court proceedings.[77]

Heightened citizenship requirements edit

The general residence requirement for acquiring citizenship was relaxed in 1984. Naturalisation candidates were required to have lived in Australia for two of the five years preceding an application, while holding permanent residency for at least one year during that aggregate period.[47] However, concerns over an influx of unintended immigration and the perceived exploitation of nationality law by illegal migrants to gain residence in Australia created the impetus for ending unrestricted birthright citizenship in 1986. Children born in the country since then are only granted citizenship by birth if at least one parent is a citizen or permanent resident.[78] Naturalisation candidates have been required since 1993 to recite a citizenship pledge in which they commit their loyalty to the country of Australia, rather than swear an oath of allegiance to the Australian monarch.[79] Automatic denaturalisation of Australians acquiring foreign nationalities was repealed in 2002.[80] Citizenship tests were introduced in 2007 and the general residence requirement was increased back to four years as well.[81]

Government powers for citizenship deprivation were greatly expanded in 2015.[82] Australians holding another nationality and engaged in terrorist activities were subject to automatic loss of citizenship.[83] These measures were amended in 2020 to require an explicit revocation order from the Minister for Home Affairs.[84]

Territorial changes edit

Papua, New Guinea, and Nauru edit

Queensland attempted to preemptively counter German colonial interests in the Pacific by annexing Papua in 1883, though this was met with disapproval from imperial authorities.[85] Following the establishment of German New Guinea, Britain claimed Papua in 1884[86] and formally annexed it in 1888. After Australian federation in 1901, Britain ceded administrative control of the territory to the Commonwealth government in 1902, which was accepted by Australia in 1905.[87] New Guinea and Nauru remained German colonies until the First World War, after which New Guinea became a League of Nations mandate under Australian control while Nauru's mandate was split between Britain, Australia, and New Zealand. In practice, Australia held sole governing authority over Nauru.[88][89]

While residents of Papua became British subjects,[90] that status was not extended to those from the mandated territories under the recommendation of the Permanent Mandates Commission.[91] Residents of New Guinea and Nauru were instead treated as British protected persons.[92][93] When Australian citizenship was created in 1949, Papuans automatically became Australian citizens while New Guinea and Nauru residents became "Australian protected persons".[94][92][93] Despite their status as British subjects/Australian citizens, Papuans of indigenous descent did not have an automatic right to reside in mainland Australia and were required to apply for that separately. Persons with non-indigenous ancestry held that right automatically.[95]

Papua New Guinea became independent in 1975.[96] Indigenous residents born in Papua or New Guinea with two grandparents also born in either territory or surrounding area, who did not have right of residence in mainland Australia, and did not hold foreign nationality automatically became citizens of the new country.[97] Former Australian citizens born in Papua before independence seeking to resume citizenship cannot reacquire that status by descent. Because Papua fell within the definition of "Australia" before 1975, applicants cannot claim citizenship through their birth overseas.[48] Since 2007, Papua New Guinean citizens who lost Australian citizenship on independence but have a parent born on the Australian mainland can apply for a special resumption of citizenship.[98]

Indian Ocean territories edit

The Cocos (Keeling) Islands and Christmas Island were respectively annexed into the Empire in 1857 and 1888. The Cocos Islands were first directly administered by the UK until 1878, when it was transferred to Ceylon, then to the Straits Settlements in 1886, and finally devolved to the settlement of Singapore in 1903. Christmas Island was similarly incorporated into Singapore in 1900.[99] Following the Second World War, the Australian government expressed its interest in acquiring both territories for strategic and commercial reasons; the Cocos Islands for its airstrip and Christmas Island for its phosphate.[100] Sovereignty over the Cocos Islands was transferred to Australia in 1955. Island residents became Australian citizens at time of transfer while retaining UK citizenship. Christmas Island was transferred to Australia in 1958 under largely the same terms. Citizens from these territories did not have automatic right of residence on the Australian mainland, as was the case with citizens from Papua,[101] until this restriction was repealed in 1984. No Australian citizen has been required to obtain an entry permit to enter the country since that year.[102]

Burmese independence edit

Burma gained independence from the United Kingdom on 4 January 1948. The British Parliament enacted the Burma Independence Act 1947 to remove British subject status from all individuals who held that status solely through their connection with Burma. Burmese resident in the UK or its colonies could make formal claims to retain subject status.[103]

The Australian Parliament did not pass similar legislation addressing this event, leaving only common law to apply. Australian common law at the time dictated that only Burmese resident in Burma at the time of independence lost British nationality, while every Burmese person who left Burma permanently before its independence or "within a reasonable time thereafter" retained British subject status. This created an anomalous situation where Burmese living in Australia ceased to be British subjects under UK law, but continued that status in Australian law.[103]

The Nationality and Citizenship (Burmese) Act 1950 addressed this discrepancy, removing British subject status from persons connected with Burma. Individuals who lost subject status through this Act but had become Australian citizens in 1949 could retain their citizenship by making formal declarations[103] within two years of the Act's passage.[104]

Acquisition and loss of citizenship edit

Entitlement by birth, descent, or adoption edit

All persons born in Australia before 20 August 1986 automatically received citizenship at birth regardless of the nationalities of their parents. Individuals born in the country since that date receive Australian citizenship at birth if at least one parent is a citizen or permanent resident.[78] Children born in Australia to New Zealand citizens since 1 July 2022 also receive Australian citizenship at birth.[105]

A person born outside Australia to an Australian citizen parent is eligible to acquire Australian citizenship by descent through application.[106] If the parent acquired citizenship by descent or adoption, the parent must have resided in Australia for at least two years at the time of application.[107]

Adopted children are treated as if they were naturally born to the adopting parents at the time and location of adoption; those adopted in Australia automatically receive citizenship, while those adopted overseas are eligible to apply.[108] Children who are born in Australia but did not acquire citizenship at birth may otherwise automatically acquire citizenship if they are ordinarily resident in the country for the 10-year period immediately following their birth.[109] Stateless children born in the country are entitled to citizenship without further residence requirements.[110]

Voluntary acquisition edit

 
Prime Minister Julia Gillard and Secretary of the Department of Immigration and Citizenship Andrew Metcalfe with a new citizen at a 2011 citizenship ceremony

Noncitizens over the age of 18 may become Australian citizens by conferral after legally residing in the country for more than four years and holding permanent residency for at least 12 months. Applicants must not have been outside of Australia for longer than 12 months in the preceding four years, with absences totaling less than 90 days in the final year. Candidates who are overseas while enlisted in the Australian Defence Force, deemed to be engaged in activities for Australia's benefit, or employed in a position that requires regular travel abroad can be considered to have fulfilled special residence requirements.[111] Members of the Australian Commonwealth Games team and holders of distinguished talent visas have also been eligible for special residence considerations since 2021.[112]

Applicants between the ages of 18 and 59 must complete a citizenship test in which they demonstrate basic competency in the English language as well as sufficient knowledge of the country and citizenship.[113] Successful candidates aged 16 and older are required to make a citizenship pledge in which they commit their loyalty to the country of Australia; these are usually administered by local government at citizenship ceremonies that take place about six months after approval.[114] Between 1 July 2020 and 30 June 2021, over 140,000 people obtained Australian citizenship by conferral.[115]

Pathway for New Zealand citizens edit

New Zealand citizens are generally exempt from immigration restrictions under the Trans-Tasman Travel Arrangement and fall under unique regulations. Any New Zealander who settled in Australia on or before 26 February 2001 is automatically considered a permanent resident for nationality purposes, while those who arrive after that date were required to first obtain permanent residency before they may naturalise.[116] Beginning on 1 July 2023, all New Zealand citizens holding a Special Category Visa (SCV) who have been resident in Australia for at least four years will no longer be required to obtain permanent residency before naturalisation.[117]

Children born in Australia to New Zealand citizens between the end of unrestricted birthright citizenship on 20 August 1986 and 31 August 1994 were "exempt non-citizens" and considered to have been permanent residents for any time spent living in the country during this period. The SCV was introduced for New Zealand citizens on 1 September 1994; all New Zealand citizens already in the country on that date were automatically granted this visa and it is issued on arrival to New Zealanders after that date. A child born in Australia between 1 September 1994 and 26 February 2001 to a New Zealand parent with an SCV or permanent visa is an Australian citizen by birth. Between 27 February 2001 and 30 June 2022, children born to New Zealand citizens in Australia only received Australian citizenship at birth if at least one parent held an SCV issued before 27 February 2001, a permanent Australian visa, or dual Australian-New Zealand citizenship.[118] Since 1 July 2022, children born in Australia to New Zealand citizens are automatically Australian citizens by birth.[105]

Since 1 January 2023, New Zealand citizens holding an SCV who are granted the Skilled Independent (subclass 189) permanent resident visa under the New Zealand stream are considered to have been permanent residents in Australia since 1 January 2022, making them immediately eligible for Australian citizenship by conferral without a further term of residence. Any New Zealand citizen who already held this type of visa before 2023 is also considered to have their permanent residence backdated. Children born between 1 January 2022 and 30 June 2023 to SCV holders who are later granted the subclass 189 visa between those dates retroactively acquire Australian citizenship by birth.[119]

By 15 August 2023, over 15,000 New Zealand citizens residing in Australia had applied for Australian citizenship under the new criteria, with 500 passing the Australian citizenship test at the time of publication.[120]

Loss and resumption of citizenship edit

Australian citizenship can be relinquished by making a declaration of renunciation, although this may be denied at the discretion of the Minister for Home Affairs. Citizenship may be involuntarily deprived from individuals who fraudulently acquired it, or from dual citizens who actively serve in the military of another country at war with Australia. Children of former citizens may also be stripped of citizenship, except in cases where another parent remains an Australian citizen or deprivation would cause statelessness.[121] Dual citizens who are engaged in terrorist activities, part of a known terror group, or have been convicted of terrorism offences for imprisonment sentences totaling at least three years may also be stripped of their citizenship at the discretion of the Minister.[122]

Until 4 April 2002, Australians who became citizens of another country automatically lost Australian citizenship.[123] This restriction did not apply to those who acquired a foreign citizenship by marriage, and did not require naturalisation candidates to relinquish their former nationalities.[80] Children born to individuals who lost their citizenship under this provision for automatic loss before 2002 are eligible for a special conferral of citizenship.[124]

Former citizens may subsequently apply for nationality restoration, provided that they would have been subject to hardship had they not renounced Australian citizenship, or were automatically deprived of their Australian citizenship before 2002. Individuals resuming citizenship regain the same type of citizenship they held previously; a person who had acquired citizenship by descent, relinquishes it, then resumes citizenship would regain citizenship by descent.[125] Citizens of Papua New Guinea who lost Australian citizenship on independence in 1975 but have a parent born on the Australian mainland have been able to apply for a special resumption of citizenship since 2007.[98]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

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  93. ^ a b O'Connell 1954, p. 461.
  94. ^ Thwaites 2017, pp. 11–12.
  95. ^ McDermott 2009, p. 61.
  96. ^ McDermott 2009, p. 50.
  97. ^ McDermott 2009, pp. 60, 63.
  98. ^ a b McDermott 2009, pp. 72–73.
  99. ^ Kerr 2009, pp. 268, 317.
  100. ^ Kerr 2009, pp. 268–269, 320–321.
  101. ^ Kerr 2009, pp. 285–287, 325–327.
  102. ^ McDermott 2009, p. 62.
  103. ^ a b c "Commonwealth", University of Western Australia Law Review, pp. 140–141.
  104. ^ Nationality and Citizenship (Burmese) Act 1950, s. 3(2).
  105. ^ a b Hipkins, Chris (22 April 2023). "Historic Day for Kiwis living in Australia; citizens rights restored". New Zealand Government. from the original on 21 April 2023. Retrieved 25 April 2023.
  106. ^ Thwaites 2017, p. 19.
  107. ^ "Australian Citizenship by Descent" (PDF). Australian Embassy, Bangkok. (PDF) from the original on 7 March 2021. Retrieved 20 July 2022.
  108. ^ Thwaites 2017, pp. 18–19.
  109. ^ Thwaites 2017, p. 18.
  110. ^ Foster, McAdam & Wadley 2017, pp. 471–472.
  111. ^ Thwaites 2017, pp. 21–22.
  112. ^ Alex Hawke, Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs (14 September 2021). "Increased flexibility for citizenship applicants" (Press release). Australian Government. from the original on 15 September 2021. Retrieved 24 October 2021.
  113. ^ "Learn about the interview and test". Department of Home Affairs. from the original on 18 August 2021. Retrieved 25 October 2021.
  114. ^ "Citizenship ceremony". Department of Home Affairs. from the original on 21 October 2021. Retrieved 25 October 2021.
  115. ^ "Australian citizenship statistics". Department of Home Affairs. from the original on 21 October 2021. Retrieved 25 October 2021.
  116. ^ Thwaites 2017, p. 29.
  117. ^ McKeith, Sam (21 April 2023). Sarkar, Himani (ed.). "Australia unveils direct pathway to citizenship for New Zealanders". Reuters. from the original on 22 April 2023. Retrieved 25 April 2023.
  118. ^ "Fact Sheet - New Zealanders in Australia" (PDF). Department of Home Affairs. (PDF) from the original on 19 October 2021. Retrieved 14 October 2021.
  119. ^ "Expedited citizenship pathway for New Zealand stream Skilled Independent (subclass 189) visa holders". Department of Home Affairs. 1 January 2023. from the original on 2 February 2023. Retrieved 2 February 2023.
  120. ^ Hurst, Daniel; Karp, Paul (13 August 2023). "More than 15,000 New Zealanders apply for Australian citizenship in six weeks". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
  121. ^ Thwaites 2017, pp. 22–23.
  122. ^ Gillis 2020, pp. 455–456.
  123. ^ Rubenstein 2005, p. 23.
  124. ^ Australian Citizenship Act 2007, s. 21(6).
  125. ^ Thwaites 2017, p. 22.

Sources edit

Publications edit

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  • Gillis, Matilda (2020). "A Doctrinal and Feminist Analysis of the Constitutionality of the Australian Citizenship Revocation Laws". Adelaide Law Review. University of Adelaide. 41 (2): 449–478. from the original on 25 October 2021. Retrieved 25 October 2021 – via Australasian Legal Information Institute.
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  • Irving, Helen (2004). "Citizenship and Subject-Hood in Twentieth-Century Australia". In Boyer, Pierre; Cardinal, Linda; Headon, David (eds.). From Subjects to Citizens: A Hundred Years of Citizenship in Australia and Canada. University of Ottawa Press. pp. 9–18. ISBN 978-0-77661-597-4. JSTOR j.ctt1ckpgmh.6.
  • Karatani, Rieko (2003). Defining British Citizenship: Empire, Commonwealth and Modern Britain. Frank Cass Publishers. ISBN 0-7146-8298-5. from the original on 25 December 2019. Retrieved 12 October 2021.
  • Kaye, Stuart B. (1996). "Forgotten Source: The Legislative Legacy of the Federal Council of Australasia" (PDF). Newcastle Law Review. University of Newcastle. 1 (2): 57–71. OCLC 7128733924. (PDF) from the original on 16 May 2017. Retrieved 9 May 2021 – via Australasian Legal Information Institute.
  • Kerr, Alan (2009). A Federation in These Seas: An account of the acquisition by Australia of its external territories, with selected documents. Australian Government. ISBN 978-1-9212-4172-7. from the original on 16 October 2021. Retrieved 14 October 2021.
  • Klapdor, Michael; Coombs, Moira; Bohm, Catherine (11 September 2009). "Australian Citizenship: A Chronology of Major Developments in Policy and Law". Social Policy and Law and Bills Digest Sections. Canberra, Australian Capital Territory: Parliament of Australia. from the original on 22 April 2021. Retrieved 10 May 2021.
  • Kondo, Atsushi, ed. (2001). Citizenship in a Global World. Palgrave Macmillan. doi:10.1057/9780333993880. ISBN 978-0-333-80266-3.
  • Lee, Joseph (1889). "Anti-Chinese Legislation in Australasia". Quarterly Journal of Economics. Oxford University Press. 3 (2): 218–224. doi:10.2307/1879468. JSTOR 1879468.
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  • McDermott, Peter M (2009). "Australian Citizenship and the Independence of Papua New Guinea" (PDF). UNSW Law Journal. University of New South Wales. 32 (1): 50–74. (PDF) from the original on 3 April 2021. Retrieved 13 October 2021.
  • McKay, James (2008). "The Passage of the 1962 Commonwealth Immigrants Act, a Case-Study of Backbench Power". Observatoire de la Société Britannique. University of Toulon (6): 89–108. doi:10.4000/osb.433.
  • Moore, C.R. (1984). "The Clem Lack Memorial Oration: Queensland's annexation of New Guinea in 1883". Journal of the Royal Historical Society of Queensland. Royal Historical Society of Queensland. 12 (1): 26–54. from the original on 26 March 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
  • Norberry, Jennifer; Williams, George (2002). Voters and the Franchise: the Federal Story (PDF) (Report). Parliamentary Library of Australia. ISSN 1328-7478. (PDF) from the original on 8 February 2023. Retrieved 6 February 2023.
  • O'Connell, D P (1954). "Nationality in C Class Mandates". The British Yearbook of International Law. Oxford University Press. 31: 458–461. from the original on 16 October 2021. Retrieved 14 October 2021 – via HeinOnline.
  • Paul, Kathleen (1997). Whitewashing Britain: Race and Citizenship in the Postwar Era. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-8440-7. from the original on 26 December 2019. Retrieved 13 October 2021.
  • Rubenstein, Kim (2005). "'From this Time Forward... I Pledge My Loyalty to Australia': Loyalty, Citizenship and Constitutional Law in Australia". In Mason, Victoria; Nile, Richard (eds.). Loyalties. API Network. pp. 23–36. SSRN 1130626.
  • Ryan, Bernard (2001). "The Common Travel Area between Britain and Ireland" (PDF). The Modern Law Review. Wiley. 64 (6): 855–874. doi:10.1111/1468-2230.00356. JSTOR 1097196. (PDF) from the original on 20 March 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  • Spagnolo, Benjamin (2015). The Continuity of Legal Systems in Theory and Practice. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-8494-6884-8. from the original on 16 October 2021. Retrieved 15 October 2021.
  • Stephen, Ninian (2000). "Australian Citizenship: Past, Present and Future". Monash University Law Review. Monash University. 26 (2): 333–338. from the original on 16 October 2021. Retrieved 13 October 2021 – via Australasian Legal Information Institute.
  • Thwaites, Rayner (May 2017). Report on Citizenship Law: Australia (Report). European University Institute. hdl:1814/46449.
  • Wade, E.C.S. (1948). "British Nationality Act, 1948". Journal of Comparative Legislation and International Law. Cambridge University Press & Assessment. 30 (3/4): 67–75. JSTOR 754289.

Legislation edit

  • Australian Citizenship Act 2007 (Cth)
  • Nationality and Citizenship (Burmese) Act 1950 (Cth)

External links edit

  • Citizenship pathways, Department of Home Affairs

australian, nationality, details, conditions, which, person, national, australia, primary, governing, nationality, regulations, australian, citizenship, 2007, which, came, into, force, july, 2007, applicable, states, territories, australia, australian, citizen. Australian nationality law details the conditions by which a person is a national of Australia The primary law governing nationality regulations is the Australian Citizenship Act 2007 which came into force on 1 July 2007 and is applicable in all states and territories of Australia Australian Citizenship Act 2007Parliament of AustraliaLong title An Act relating to Australian citizenshipCitationNo 20 of 2007Territorial extentAustraliaEnacted byHouse of RepresentativesEnacted1 March 2007 with amendments from the Senate Enacted bySenateEnacted26 February 2007Royal assent15 March 2007Commenced1 July 2007Administered byDepartment of Home Affairs 1 Legislative historyFirst chamber House of RepresentativesBill titleAustralian Citizenship Bill 2005Introduced byJohn CobbFirst reading9 November 2005Second reading28 November 2006Third reading28 November 2006Second chamber SenateBill titleAustralian Citizenship Bill 2006Member in ChargeIan CampbellFirst reading30 November 2006Second reading26 February 2007Third reading26 February 2007 2 RepealsAustralian Citizenship Act 1948Status AmendedAll persons born in Australia before 20 August 1986 were automatically citizens at birth regardless of the nationalities of their parents Individuals born in the country after that date receive Australian citizenship at birth if at least one of their parents is an Australian citizen or permanent resident Children born in Australia to New Zealand citizens since 1 July 2022 also receive Australian citizenship at birth Foreign nationals may be granted citizenship after living in the country for at least four years holding permanent residency for one year and showing proficiency in the English language Australia is composed of several former British colonies founded in the 18th and 19th centuries whose residents were British subjects After federation as a Dominion within the British Empire in 1901 Australia was granted more autonomy over time and gradually became independent from the United Kingdom Although Australian citizens have no longer been British subjects since 1984 they continue to hold favoured status when residing in the UK As Commonwealth citizens Australians are eligible to vote in UK elections and serve in public office there Contents 1 Terminology 2 Colonial era history 2 1 Fragmented development 2 1 1 Discriminatory policies against Indigenous Australians and non European migrants 3 Post federation policies 3 1 Imperial common code 3 2 Australian citizenship created 3 3 Reform and abolition of British subject status 3 4 Heightened citizenship requirements 3 5 Territorial changes 3 5 1 Papua New Guinea and Nauru 3 5 2 Indian Ocean territories 3 5 3 Burmese independence 4 Acquisition and loss of citizenship 4 1 Entitlement by birth descent or adoption 4 2 Voluntary acquisition 4 3 Pathway for New Zealand citizens 4 4 Loss and resumption of citizenship 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Sources 6 2 1 Publications 6 2 2 Legislation 7 External linksTerminology editThe distinction between the meaning of the terms citizenship and nationality is not always clear in the English language and differs by country Generally nationality refers a person s legal belonging to a state and is the common term used in international treaties when referring to members of that polity citizenship refers to the set of rights and duties a person has in that nation 3 Despite this distinction the Australian Government uses these two terms interchangeably 4 Colonial era history editFragmented development edit See also British subject and History of British nationality law Britain established its first colony in Australia with the founding of New South Wales in 1788 Over the course of the 19th century the British presence expanded throughout the continent By 1890 there were six separate self governing territories in Australia 5 British nationality law applied to each of these colonies as was the case elsewhere in the British Empire Australians and all other imperial citizens were British subjects 6 any person born in the Australian colonies the United Kingdom or anywhere else within Crown dominions was a natural born British subject 7 British nationality law during this time was uncodified and did not have a standard set of regulations 8 relying instead on precedent and common law 9 Until the mid 19th century it was unclear whether naturalisation rules in the United Kingdom were applicable in other parts of the Empire Each colony had wide discretion in developing their own procedures and requirements for admitting foreign settlers as subjects 10 New South Wales and Tasmania respectively enacted legislation in 1828 and 1834 enabling denization a process that partially granted foreign citizens the rights of British subjects most notably property rights 11 Denizens were not considered aliens but could not pass subject status to their children by descent and were barred from Crown service and public office 12 Naturalisation in Britain was achieved through individual Acts of Parliament until 1844 when a more streamlined administrative process was introduced The Australian colonies emulated this system in their own naturalisation legislation which was enacted in all local legislatures by 1871 11 In 1847 the Imperial Parliament formalised a clear distinction between subjects who naturalised in the UK and those who did so in other territories Individuals who naturalised in the UK were deemed to have received the status by imperial naturalisation which was valid throughout the Empire Those naturalising in colonies were said to have gone through local naturalisation and were given subject status valid only within the relevant territory 13 a subject who locally naturalised in New South Wales was a British subject there but not in England or Victoria Nevertheless locally naturalised British subjects were still entitled to imperial protection when travelling outside of the Empire 14 Married women generally followed the nationality status of their husbands Beginning with New South Wales in 1848 each colony enacted legislation that automatically naturalised foreign women who married British subjects mirroring regulations enacted in the UK in 1844 After Britain established marital denaturalisation for British subject women who married non British men in 1870 New South Wales adapted its rules to match this in 1875 The other Australian colonies did not adopt this in legislation but in practice women who married foreign men were automatically stripped of British subject status throughout Australia 15 The Federal Council of Australasia created in 1885 was a first attempt at forming a unified governing body in the region and consisted of four Australian colonies Queensland Tasmania Victoria and Western Australia along with Fiji 16 Legislation passed by the Federal Council in 1897 allowed British subjects who had naturalised in a colony under its authority to be considered as naturalised in other such colonies 17 Discriminatory policies against Indigenous Australians and non European migrants edit Main articles Voting rights of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and White Australia policy Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders became British subjects as the colonies were settled throughout the continent 18 but actual participation in colonial society and access to civil rights was limited In Queensland and Western Australia franchise qualification for an Indigenous person was dependent on their ownership of land that was valued at least 100 which was prohibitively expensive for the time and barred virtually all such persons from voting 19 While there were no specific restrictions in legislation on Indigenous voting in the other colonies other regulatory barriers often prevented exercising that right Between 1858 and 1926 New South Wales disqualified persons receiving aid from any public charitable institution from voting registration anyone living in Aboriginal reserves were considered to be receiving aid Some exceptions were afforded to landholders and half caste Aboriginals 20 Immigration from Asia began in the 1840s when Chinese workers were invited to work in New South Wales due to a labour shortage Although these labourers were met with almost immediate disapproval the Australian gold rushes beginning in the 1850s attracted a steady wave of further migration Growing hostility and anti Chinese sentiment led to severe social unrest and violent confrontations during the Lambing Flat riots in 1861 Following this New South Wales imposed substantial restrictions on Chinese entry 21 Regulations varied by colony but clearly favoured immigrants of European descent over members of any other ethnic groups Queensland created two different sets of requirements in 1867 for naturalisation of Asiatic and African aliens and European and North American aliens Asian and African applicants seeking to become subjects were required to have lived in the colony for three years and be married and living together with their wives 22 Chinese migrants were specifically targeted in colonial legislation that charged fees for entry to or residence in the colonies and banned them from naturalising as British subjects In 1889 entrance fees for Chinese in each of the Australasian colonies were standardised at 10 except for Queensland which required 30 23 Post federation policies editMain article Federation of Australia The Federal Council of Australasia was abolished in 1900 24 and replaced on 1 January 1901 by the Commonwealth of Australia 25 a federation of the six Australian colonies The status of Australians as British subjects including Indigenous Australians remained unchanged despite the creation of this union 26 18 Commonwealth nationality legislation enacted in 1903 superseded laws of the new states naturalisation in one of the states became automatically valid in all of them 27 The federal government continued and extended restrictions on persons of non European descent as part of its White Australia policy The Immigration Restriction Act 1901 created the legal basis for administering dictation tests in any European language as determined by an immigration officer Any person who failed was denied entry into Australia 28 While Maori from New Zealand technically fell under the exclusion criteria of this Act representations made by the New Zealand government pressured the Commonwealth government into exceptionally relaxing restrictions for Maori 29 The Naturalization Act 1903 explicitly prohibited naturalisation of anyone with ancestry from Africa Asia or Oceania except New Zealand 30 Indigenous Australians who did not already have their names placed on a state electoral roll on the date of federation were largely prohibited from enrolling to vote in federal elections from 1902 to 1962 31 Imperial common code edit The Imperial Parliament brought regulations for British subject status into codified statute law for the first time with passage of the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act 1914 British subject status was standardised as a common nationality across the Empire Dominions that adopted this Act as part of local legislation were authorised to grant subject status to aliens by imperial naturalisation 32 33 Australia adopted the common code in 1920 25 The 1914 regulations codified the doctrine of coverture into imperial nationality law where a woman s consent to marry a foreign national was also assumed to be intent to denaturalise British women who married foreign men automatically lost their British nationality There were two exceptions to this a wife married to a husband who lost his British subject status was able to retain British nationality by declaration and a British born widow or divorcee who had lost her British nationality through marriage could reacquire that status without meeting residence requirements after the dissolution of her marriage 34 Australia s version of the common code regulations contained extensive measures for revoking British subject status from naturalised persons Individuals who showed disloyalty to the monarch were sentenced to imprisonment for at least one year or received a fine of more than 100 within five years of naturalising had been deemed to be not of good character when subject status was granted or lived outside of the British Empire for more than seven years were liable to have their naturalisation revoked 35 Unlike the 1903 Act the common code enacted in 1920 did not explicitly bar migrants on the basis of race It instead allowed the government to deny naturalisation to any person without cause Only 45 people of Asian descent were naturalised between 1904 and 1953 30 Migrants of non European ancestry were effectively barred from permanent residency and naturalisation until 1957 36 By the end of the First World War the Dominions had exercised increasing levels of autonomy in managing their own affairs and each by then had developed a distinct national identity Britain formally recognised this at the 1926 Imperial Conference jointly issuing the Balfour Declaration with all the Dominion heads of government which stated that the United Kingdom and Dominions were autonomous and equal to each other within the British Commonwealth of Nations Full legislative independence was granted to the Dominions with passage of the Statute of Westminster 1931 37 Women s rights groups throughout the Empire pressured the imperial government during this time to amend nationality regulations that tied a married woman s status to that of her husband 38 Because the British government could no longer enforce legislative supremacy over the Dominions after 1931 and wanted to maintain a strong constitutional link to them through the common nationality code it was unwilling to make major changes without unanimous agreement among the Dominions on this issue which it did not have 39 Imperial legal uniformity was nevertheless eroded during the 1930s New Zealand and Australia amended their laws in 1935 and 1936 to allow women denaturalised by marriage to retain their rights as British subjects and Ireland changed its regulations in 1935 to cause no change to a woman s nationality after her marriage 40 Australian citizenship created edit Diverging developments in Dominion nationality laws as well as growing assertions of local national identity separate from that of Britain and the Empire culminated with the creation of Canadian citizenship in 1946 unilaterally breaking the system of a common imperial nationality Combined with the approaching independence of India and Pakistan in 1947 comprehensive nationality law reform was necessary at this point to address ideas that were incompatible with the previous system 41 The Dominion governments agreed on the principle of equal standing for women in a reformed nationality system at the 1946 Commonwealth Prime Ministers Conference and Australia amended its law to grant equal nationality rights in that same year 42 Australia enacted the Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948 to create its own citizenship which came into force on 26 January 1949 43 shortly after the British Nationality Act 1948 became effective throughout the Empire on 1 January 1949 44 All British subjects who were born naturalised or resident for at least five years in Australia automatically acquired Australian citizenship on that date 36 45 British subjects born to a father who himself was born or naturalised in Australia 36 and British subject women who were married to someone qualifying as an Australian citizen also automatically acquired citizenship on that date 46 All other noncitizens could acquire citizenship by naturalisation after fulfilling a general residence requirement Candidates must have resided in Australia including Papua or New Guinea for at least four of the previous eight years with one year of continuous residence immediately preceding an application This was reduced to two of the previous eight years in 1973 47 48 Non Europeans were allowed to apply for residency and naturalisation from 1957 if they were legally admitted and living in Australia for 15 years reduced to five years in 1966 49 Almost all provisions to revoke citizenship from naturalised individuals were repealed in 1958 35 On the other hand Australian citizens who acquired a foreign citizenship other than through marriage were automatically denaturalised and lost their Australian citizenship under this Act Individuals who naturalised as Australian citizens conversely were not required to renounce their previous nationalities 50 Restrictions on Indigenous Australian rights were relaxed in 1949 when eligibility to enrol in federal elections was extended to any Indigenous Australian who was already enrolled to vote in state elections or had been a member of the armed forces 51 Voting eligibility was extended to all Indigenous Australians in 1962 52 and following a 1967 referendum they began to be included as part of state population counts in each national census 53 Reform and abolition of British subject status edit See also British subject and Commonwealth citizen The 1948 Act redefined the term British subject as any citizen of Australia or another Commonwealth country Commonwealth citizen is defined in this Act to have the same meaning 54 British subject Commonwealth citizen status co existed with the citizenships of each Commonwealth country 55 56 Irish citizens were treated as if they were British subjects despite Ireland s exit from the Commonwealth in 1949 57 All Commonwealth citizens were eligible to become Australian citizens by registration rather than naturalisation after residing in Australia for at least five of the preceding seven years Commonwealth citizens who became Australian citizens by registration were not required to swear an oath of allegiance because they were already subjects of the Crown 58 All British subjects under the reformed system initially held an automatic right to settle in the United Kingdom and Ireland 59 60 Non white immigration into the UK was systemically discouraged but strong economic conditions in Britain following the Second World War attracted an unprecedented wave of colonial migration 61 In response the British Parliament imposed immigration controls on any subjects originating from outside the British Islands with the Commonwealth Immigrants Act 1962 62 Ireland had continued to allow all British subjects free movement despite independence in 1922 as part of the Common Travel Area arrangement but moved to mirror Britain s restriction in 1962 by limiting this ability only to people born on the islands of Great Britain or Ireland 63 60 Britain somewhat relaxed these measures in 1971 for patrials subjects whose parents or grandparents were born in the United Kingdom 62 which gave effective preferential treatment to white Commonwealth citizens 64 As a sign of Australia s changing relationship with Britain Australian passports were no longer labelled with the phrase British passport beginning in 1967 65 Legislative changes in 1969 meant that Australian citizens technically ceased to be British subjects in that year but retained the status of British subjects instead 66 67 Preferences that were afforded to citizens from other Commonwealth countries and restrictions on migrants of non European descent were abolished in a further 1973 amendment 49 The name of the Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948 itself changed to the Australian Citizenship Act 1948 in 1973 as well 68 the anniversary of this event has been celebrated since 2001 as Australian Citizenship Day 69 By the 1970s and 1980s most colonies of the British Empire had become independent and remaining ties to the United Kingdom had been significantly weakened 70 The UK itself updated its nationality law to reflect the more modest boundaries of its remaining territory and possessions with the British Nationality Act 1981 70 which redefined British subject to no longer also mean Commonwealth citizen Australian citizens remain Commonwealth citizens in British law 71 and are still eligible to vote and stand for public office in the UK 72 Further reforms in 1984 fully abolished British subject status in Australian law 67 and removed remaining gender imbalances in nationality regulations 73 74 Voting eligibility rules were changed to require Australian citizenship instead of British subject status but any British subject without citizenship already enrolled to vote before 26 January 1984 had the right to continue participating in elections Noncitizen British subjects could no longer apply for Australian passports beginning in that year 75 After passage of the Australia Act 1986 the High Court has considered any persons without Australian citizenship to be aliens While British subjects could not have been considered foreign at the time of federation the severing of constitutional ties with the United Kingdom created a definitive separation between the two countries British citizens have since been considered subjects of a foreign power and are ineligible to serve in the Parliament of Australia under section 44 of the Constitution of Australia 76 The eligibility of 10 sitting legislators was questioned under this section of the Constitution during the 2017 18 Australian parliamentary eligibility crisis leading to eight disqualifications under subsequent court proceedings 77 Heightened citizenship requirements edit The general residence requirement for acquiring citizenship was relaxed in 1984 Naturalisation candidates were required to have lived in Australia for two of the five years preceding an application while holding permanent residency for at least one year during that aggregate period 47 However concerns over an influx of unintended immigration and the perceived exploitation of nationality law by illegal migrants to gain residence in Australia created the impetus for ending unrestricted birthright citizenship in 1986 Children born in the country since then are only granted citizenship by birth if at least one parent is a citizen or permanent resident 78 Naturalisation candidates have been required since 1993 to recite a citizenship pledge in which they commit their loyalty to the country of Australia rather than swear an oath of allegiance to the Australian monarch 79 Automatic denaturalisation of Australians acquiring foreign nationalities was repealed in 2002 80 Citizenship tests were introduced in 2007 and the general residence requirement was increased back to four years as well 81 Government powers for citizenship deprivation were greatly expanded in 2015 82 Australians holding another nationality and engaged in terrorist activities were subject to automatic loss of citizenship 83 These measures were amended in 2020 to require an explicit revocation order from the Minister for Home Affairs 84 Territorial changes edit Papua New Guinea and Nauru edit See also Territory of Papua and New Guinea and Nauru Queensland attempted to preemptively counter German colonial interests in the Pacific by annexing Papua in 1883 though this was met with disapproval from imperial authorities 85 Following the establishment of German New Guinea Britain claimed Papua in 1884 86 and formally annexed it in 1888 After Australian federation in 1901 Britain ceded administrative control of the territory to the Commonwealth government in 1902 which was accepted by Australia in 1905 87 New Guinea and Nauru remained German colonies until the First World War after which New Guinea became a League of Nations mandate under Australian control while Nauru s mandate was split between Britain Australia and New Zealand In practice Australia held sole governing authority over Nauru 88 89 While residents of Papua became British subjects 90 that status was not extended to those from the mandated territories under the recommendation of the Permanent Mandates Commission 91 Residents of New Guinea and Nauru were instead treated as British protected persons 92 93 When Australian citizenship was created in 1949 Papuans automatically became Australian citizens while New Guinea and Nauru residents became Australian protected persons 94 92 93 Despite their status as British subjects Australian citizens Papuans of indigenous descent did not have an automatic right to reside in mainland Australia and were required to apply for that separately Persons with non indigenous ancestry held that right automatically 95 Papua New Guinea became independent in 1975 96 Indigenous residents born in Papua or New Guinea with two grandparents also born in either territory or surrounding area who did not have right of residence in mainland Australia and did not hold foreign nationality automatically became citizens of the new country 97 Former Australian citizens born in Papua before independence seeking to resume citizenship cannot reacquire that status by descent Because Papua fell within the definition of Australia before 1975 applicants cannot claim citizenship through their birth overseas 48 Since 2007 Papua New Guinean citizens who lost Australian citizenship on independence but have a parent born on the Australian mainland can apply for a special resumption of citizenship 98 Indian Ocean territories edit See also Australian Indian Ocean Territories The Cocos Keeling Islands and Christmas Island were respectively annexed into the Empire in 1857 and 1888 The Cocos Islands were first directly administered by the UK until 1878 when it was transferred to Ceylon then to the Straits Settlements in 1886 and finally devolved to the settlement of Singapore in 1903 Christmas Island was similarly incorporated into Singapore in 1900 99 Following the Second World War the Australian government expressed its interest in acquiring both territories for strategic and commercial reasons the Cocos Islands for its airstrip and Christmas Island for its phosphate 100 Sovereignty over the Cocos Islands was transferred to Australia in 1955 Island residents became Australian citizens at time of transfer while retaining UK citizenship Christmas Island was transferred to Australia in 1958 under largely the same terms Citizens from these territories did not have automatic right of residence on the Australian mainland as was the case with citizens from Papua 101 until this restriction was repealed in 1984 No Australian citizen has been required to obtain an entry permit to enter the country since that year 102 Burmese independence edit Burma gained independence from the United Kingdom on 4 January 1948 The British Parliament enacted the Burma Independence Act 1947 to remove British subject status from all individuals who held that status solely through their connection with Burma Burmese resident in the UK or its colonies could make formal claims to retain subject status 103 The Australian Parliament did not pass similar legislation addressing this event leaving only common law to apply Australian common law at the time dictated that only Burmese resident in Burma at the time of independence lost British nationality while every Burmese person who left Burma permanently before its independence or within a reasonable time thereafter retained British subject status This created an anomalous situation where Burmese living in Australia ceased to be British subjects under UK law but continued that status in Australian law 103 The Nationality and Citizenship Burmese Act 1950 addressed this discrepancy removing British subject status from persons connected with Burma Individuals who lost subject status through this Act but had become Australian citizens in 1949 could retain their citizenship by making formal declarations 103 within two years of the Act s passage 104 Acquisition and loss of citizenship editEntitlement by birth descent or adoption edit All persons born in Australia before 20 August 1986 automatically received citizenship at birth regardless of the nationalities of their parents Individuals born in the country since that date receive Australian citizenship at birth if at least one parent is a citizen or permanent resident 78 Children born in Australia to New Zealand citizens since 1 July 2022 also receive Australian citizenship at birth 105 A person born outside Australia to an Australian citizen parent is eligible to acquire Australian citizenship by descent through application 106 If the parent acquired citizenship by descent or adoption the parent must have resided in Australia for at least two years at the time of application 107 Adopted children are treated as if they were naturally born to the adopting parents at the time and location of adoption those adopted in Australia automatically receive citizenship while those adopted overseas are eligible to apply 108 Children who are born in Australia but did not acquire citizenship at birth may otherwise automatically acquire citizenship if they are ordinarily resident in the country for the 10 year period immediately following their birth 109 Stateless children born in the country are entitled to citizenship without further residence requirements 110 Voluntary acquisition edit nbsp Prime Minister Julia Gillard and Secretary of the Department of Immigration and Citizenship Andrew Metcalfe with a new citizen at a 2011 citizenship ceremonyNoncitizens over the age of 18 may become Australian citizens by conferral after legally residing in the country for more than four years and holding permanent residency for at least 12 months Applicants must not have been outside of Australia for longer than 12 months in the preceding four years with absences totaling less than 90 days in the final year Candidates who are overseas while enlisted in the Australian Defence Force deemed to be engaged in activities for Australia s benefit or employed in a position that requires regular travel abroad can be considered to have fulfilled special residence requirements 111 Members of the Australian Commonwealth Games team and holders of distinguished talent visas have also been eligible for special residence considerations since 2021 112 Applicants between the ages of 18 and 59 must complete a citizenship test in which they demonstrate basic competency in the English language as well as sufficient knowledge of the country and citizenship 113 Successful candidates aged 16 and older are required to make a citizenship pledge in which they commit their loyalty to the country of Australia these are usually administered by local government at citizenship ceremonies that take place about six months after approval 114 Between 1 July 2020 and 30 June 2021 over 140 000 people obtained Australian citizenship by conferral 115 Pathway for New Zealand citizens edit New Zealand citizens are generally exempt from immigration restrictions under the Trans Tasman Travel Arrangement and fall under unique regulations Any New Zealander who settled in Australia on or before 26 February 2001 is automatically considered a permanent resident for nationality purposes while those who arrive after that date were required to first obtain permanent residency before they may naturalise 116 Beginning on 1 July 2023 all New Zealand citizens holding a Special Category Visa SCV who have been resident in Australia for at least four years will no longer be required to obtain permanent residency before naturalisation 117 Children born in Australia to New Zealand citizens between the end of unrestricted birthright citizenship on 20 August 1986 and 31 August 1994 were exempt non citizens and considered to have been permanent residents for any time spent living in the country during this period The SCV was introduced for New Zealand citizens on 1 September 1994 all New Zealand citizens already in the country on that date were automatically granted this visa and it is issued on arrival to New Zealanders after that date A child born in Australia between 1 September 1994 and 26 February 2001 to a New Zealand parent with an SCV or permanent visa is an Australian citizen by birth Between 27 February 2001 and 30 June 2022 children born to New Zealand citizens in Australia only received Australian citizenship at birth if at least one parent held an SCV issued before 27 February 2001 a permanent Australian visa or dual Australian New Zealand citizenship 118 Since 1 July 2022 children born in Australia to New Zealand citizens are automatically Australian citizens by birth 105 Since 1 January 2023 New Zealand citizens holding an SCV who are granted the Skilled Independent subclass 189 permanent resident visa under the New Zealand stream are considered to have been permanent residents in Australia since 1 January 2022 making them immediately eligible for Australian citizenship by conferral without a further term of residence Any New Zealand citizen who already held this type of visa before 2023 is also considered to have their permanent residence backdated Children born between 1 January 2022 and 30 June 2023 to SCV holders who are later granted the subclass 189 visa between those dates retroactively acquire Australian citizenship by birth 119 By 15 August 2023 over 15 000 New Zealand citizens residing in Australia had applied for Australian citizenship under the new criteria with 500 passing the Australian citizenship test at the time of publication 120 Loss and resumption of citizenship edit Australian citizenship can be relinquished by making a declaration of renunciation although this may be denied at the discretion of the Minister for Home Affairs Citizenship may be involuntarily deprived from individuals who fraudulently acquired it or from dual citizens who actively serve in the military of another country at war with Australia Children of former citizens may also be stripped of citizenship except in cases where another parent remains an Australian citizen or deprivation would cause statelessness 121 Dual citizens who are engaged in terrorist activities part of a known terror group or have been convicted of terrorism offences for imprisonment sentences totaling at least three years may also be stripped of their citizenship at the discretion of the Minister 122 Until 4 April 2002 Australians who became citizens of another country automatically lost Australian citizenship 123 This restriction did not apply to those who acquired a foreign citizenship by marriage and did not require naturalisation candidates to relinquish their former nationalities 80 Children born to individuals who lost their citizenship under this provision for automatic loss before 2002 are eligible for a special conferral of citizenship 124 Former citizens may subsequently apply for nationality restoration provided that they would have been subject to hardship had they not renounced Australian citizenship or were automatically deprived of their Australian citizenship before 2002 Individuals resuming citizenship regain the same type of citizenship they held previously a person who had acquired citizenship by descent relinquishes it then resumes citizenship would regain citizenship by descent 125 Citizens of Papua New Guinea who lost Australian citizenship on independence in 1975 but have a parent born on the Australian mainland have been able to apply for a special resumption of citizenship since 2007 98 See also editVisa policy of Australia Visa requirements for Australian citizensReferences editCitations edit The Administration of the Immigration and Citizenship Programs PDF Report Department of Home Affairs October 2021 p 3 Archived PDF from the original on 25 October 2021 Retrieved 25 October 2021 Australian Citizenship Bill 2007 Parliament of Australia Archived from the original on 27 May 2019 Retrieved 13 June 2019 Kondo 2001 pp 2 3 Right to a name and acquire a nationality Attorney General s Department Archived from the original on 20 November 2022 Retrieved 8 February 2023 French 2006 pp 10 11 Thwaites 2017 p 3 Karatani 2003 pp 41 42 Gosewinkel 2008 p 13 Karatani 2003 p 41 Karatani 2003 pp 55 56 a b Bagnall amp Sherratt 2021 p 286 Blackstone 1765 p 362 Historical background information on nationality p 8 Karatani 2003 p 55 Bellino 2020 pp 169 170 Kaye 1996 pp 58 59 Spagnolo 2015 p 71 a b Stephen 2000 p 336 Evans et al 2003 pp 137 139 Bennett 2001b pp 17 19 Digby 1903 p 145 Bagnall amp Sherratt 2021 p 287 Lee 1889 pp 218 220 Kaye 1996 p 61 a b Thwaites 2017 p 4 Irving 2004 p 9 Spagnolo 2015 pp 71 72 Thwaites 2017 p 5 Bennett 2001a pp 39 43 a b Thwaites 2017 p 6 Bennett 2001b p 19 Baldwin 2001 pp 527 528 Historical background information on nationality p 10 Baldwin 2001 pp 526 528 529 a b Thwaites 2017 p 7 a b c Thwaites 2017 p 10 Karatani 2003 pp 86 88 Baldwin 2001 p 522 Baldwin 2001 pp 546 549 Baldwin 2001 p 552 Karatani 2003 pp 114 115 122 126 Baldwin 2001 pp 553 554 Castles amp Zappala 2001 p 139 Wade 1948 p 69 Fransman 2011 p 823 Fransman 2011 p 831 a b Thwaites 2017 p 21 a b McDermott 2009 p 71 a b Thwaites 2017 pp 10 11 Stephen 2000 pp 336 337 Norberry amp Williams 2002 p 15 Norberry amp Williams 2002 p 17 Bennett 2001b pp 16 17 19 Wade 1948 p 70 Thwaites 2017 p 2 Wade 1948 p 73 Mansergh 1952 p 278 Dutton 2002 p 16 McKay 2008 a b Ryan 2001 p 862 Hansen 1999 pp 90 94 95 a b Evans 1972 pp 508 509 Lloyd 1998 pp 515 516 Paul 1997 p 181 Doulman amp Lee 2008 p 175 Dutton 2002 p 17 a b Stephen 2000 p 333 Thwaites 2017 p 9 Australian Citizenship Act Department of Home Affairs Archived from the original on 24 October 2021 Retrieved 24 October 2021 a b Paul 1997 pp 182 183 Bloom 2011 p 640 Bloom 2011 p 654 Bellino 2020 p 171 Klapdor Coombs amp Bohm 2009 Chesterman 2005 pp 35 36 Bloch 2018 pp 92 93 Bloch 2018 p 79 a b Thwaites 2017 p 15 Betts 1994 pp 48 49 a b Thwaites 2017 p 16 Thwaites 2017 p 17 Gillis 2020 p 450 Gillis 2020 p 452 Gillis 2020 p 455 Moore 1984 pp 26 27 Moore 1984 p 41 McDermott 2009 pp 51 52 McDermott 2009 p 52 Goudy amp McDaniel 1999 p 334 McDermott 2009 p 53 O Connell 1954 p 460 a b McDermott 2009 pp 54 55 a b O Connell 1954 p 461 Thwaites 2017 pp 11 12 McDermott 2009 p 61 McDermott 2009 p 50 McDermott 2009 pp 60 63 a b McDermott 2009 pp 72 73 Kerr 2009 pp 268 317 Kerr 2009 pp 268 269 320 321 Kerr 2009 pp 285 287 325 327 McDermott 2009 p 62 a b c Commonwealth University of Western Australia Law Review pp 140 141 Nationality and Citizenship Burmese Act 1950 s 3 2 a b Hipkins Chris 22 April 2023 Historic Day for Kiwis living in Australia citizens rights restored New Zealand Government Archived from the original on 21 April 2023 Retrieved 25 April 2023 Thwaites 2017 p 19 Australian Citizenship by Descent PDF Australian Embassy Bangkok Archived PDF from the original on 7 March 2021 Retrieved 20 July 2022 Thwaites 2017 pp 18 19 Thwaites 2017 p 18 Foster McAdam amp Wadley 2017 pp 471 472 Thwaites 2017 pp 21 22 Alex Hawke Minister for Immigration Citizenship Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs 14 September 2021 Increased flexibility for citizenship applicants Press release Australian Government Archived from the original on 15 September 2021 Retrieved 24 October 2021 Learn about the interview and test Department of Home Affairs Archived from the original on 18 August 2021 Retrieved 25 October 2021 Citizenship ceremony Department of Home Affairs Archived from the original on 21 October 2021 Retrieved 25 October 2021 Australian citizenship statistics Department of Home Affairs Archived from the original on 21 October 2021 Retrieved 25 October 2021 Thwaites 2017 p 29 McKeith Sam 21 April 2023 Sarkar Himani ed Australia unveils direct pathway to citizenship for New Zealanders Reuters Archived from the original on 22 April 2023 Retrieved 25 April 2023 Fact Sheet New Zealanders in Australia PDF Department of Home Affairs Archived PDF from the original on 19 October 2021 Retrieved 14 October 2021 Expedited citizenship pathway for New Zealand stream Skilled Independent subclass 189 visa holders Department of Home Affairs 1 January 2023 Archived from the original on 2 February 2023 Retrieved 2 February 2023 Hurst Daniel Karp Paul 13 August 2023 More than 15 000 New Zealanders apply for Australian citizenship in six weeks The Guardian Retrieved 17 August 2023 Thwaites 2017 pp 22 23 Gillis 2020 pp 455 456 Rubenstein 2005 p 23 Australian Citizenship Act 2007 s 21 6 Thwaites 2017 p 22 Sources edit Publications edit Bagnall Kate Sherratt Tim 2021 Missing Links Data Stories from the Archive of British Settler Colonial Citizenship Journal of World History University of Hawaii Press 32 2 281 300 doi 10 1353 jwh 2021 0025 Baldwin M Page October 2001 Subject to Empire Married Women and the British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act Journal of British Studies Cambridge University Press 40 4 522 556 doi 10 1086 386266 JSTOR 3070746 PMID 18161209 S2CID 5762190 Bellino Emma 2020 Married Women s Nationality and the White Australia Policy 1920 1948 Law amp History Australian and New Zealand Law and History Society 7 1 166 192 ISSN 2652 4201 Archived from the original on 16 October 2021 Retrieved 9 May 2021 via HeinOnline Bennett James 2001a Maori as honorary members of the white tribe The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History Routledge 29 3 33 54 doi 10 1080 03086530108583126 PMID 18254199 S2CID 205550491 Bennett Scott 2001b Indigenous voting rights in Australia PDF Australasian Parliamentary Review Australasian Study of Parliament Group 16 1 16 20 Archived PDF from the original on 29 March 2020 Retrieved 19 October 2021 Betts Katharine 1994 The Issues Paper on Citizenship PDF People and Place Monash University 2 2 46 50 Archived PDF from the original on 18 March 2020 Retrieved 14 October 2021 via Swinburne University of Technology Blackstone William 1765 Of the People Whether Aliens Denizens or Natives Commentaries on the Laws of England Vol 1 OCLC 747740286 Bloch Noa 2018 Reading Down Section 44 i of the 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original on 26 December 2019 Retrieved 13 October 2021 Rubenstein Kim 2005 From this Time Forward I Pledge My Loyalty to Australia Loyalty Citizenship and Constitutional Law in Australia In Mason Victoria Nile Richard eds Loyalties API Network pp 23 36 SSRN 1130626 Ryan Bernard 2001 The Common Travel Area between Britain and Ireland PDF The Modern Law Review Wiley 64 6 855 874 doi 10 1111 1468 2230 00356 JSTOR 1097196 Archived PDF from the original on 20 March 2023 Retrieved 23 March 2023 Spagnolo Benjamin 2015 The Continuity of Legal Systems in Theory and Practice Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 8494 6884 8 Archived from the original on 16 October 2021 Retrieved 15 October 2021 Stephen Ninian 2000 Australian Citizenship Past Present and Future Monash University Law Review Monash University 26 2 333 338 Archived from the original on 16 October 2021 Retrieved 13 October 2021 via Australasian Legal Information Institute Thwaites Rayner May 2017 Report on Citizenship Law Australia Report European University Institute hdl 1814 46449 Wade E C S 1948 British Nationality Act 1948 Journal of Comparative Legislation and International Law Cambridge University Press amp Assessment 30 3 4 67 75 JSTOR 754289 Legislation edit Australian Citizenship Act 2007 Cth Nationality and Citizenship Burmese Act 1950 Cth External links editCitizenship pathways Department of Home Affairs Portal nbsp Australia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Australian nationality law amp oldid 1191982910, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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