Canadian Citizenship Act, 1946
The Canadian Citizenship Act
(French: Loi sur la citoyenneté canadienne; effective 1947–1977), S.C. 1946, c.
15, is an Act of the Parliament of Canada which properly created the concept
and status of Canadian citizenship in Canada, and defined who are Canadian
citizens, separate and independent from the status of the British subject
(which then came to be abolished in principle by the British Nationality Act
1948). The Act was replaced on 15 February 1977 by the Canadian Citizenship
Act, 1976,[4] now known as the Citizenship Act.
History Pre-1947 The
status of 'Canadian citizen' was originally created under the Immigration Act,
1910 to designate those British subjects who were born, naturalized, or
domiciled in Canada. All other British subjects required permission to land.
'Domicile' was defined as having been resident in Canada for three years,
excluding any time spent in prisons or mental institutions. A separate status
of 'Canadian national' was created under the Canadian Nationals Act, 1921,
which was defined as being a Canadian citizen as defined above, their wives,
and any children (fathered by such citizens) that had not yet landed in Canada.
However, these concepts were merely subsets of the status of "British
subject", which was regulated by the Imperial British Nationality and
Status of Aliens Act 1914, which was adopted in Canada by the Naturalization
Act, 1914.
Creation of Canadian
Citizenship (January 1947) Canadian citizenship, as a status separate from
British nationality, was created by the Canadian Citizenship Act, 1946, which
came into effect on 1 January 1947. Canadian citizenship was generally
conferred immediately on the following persons:a British subject who was born
in Canada (and had not become an alien before 1947), a person other than a natural-born Canadian
citizen: who was granted, or whose name was included in, a certificate
of naturalization under any act of the Parliament of Canada and had not become
an alien at the commencement of the Act, or who was a British subject
who had acquired Canadian domicile (i.e., five years' residence in Canada as a
landed immigrant) before 1947 a British subject who lived in Canada for
20 years immediately before 1947 and was not, on 1 January 1947, under order of
deportation women who were married to a Canadian before 1947 and who
entered Canada as a landed immigrant before 1947 children born outside
Canada to a Canadian father (or mother, if born out of wedlock) before 1947In
the latter two cases, a "Canadian" was a British subject who would
have been considered a Canadian citizen if the 1947 Act had come into . immediately before the marriage or birth (as
the case may be). Where the child born outside Canada was not a minor (i.e.,
was not under 21 years in age) at the time the Act came into force, proof of
landed immigrant status was required to confirm Canadian citizenship.
Acquisition and loss of
citizenship In addition to those people who became Canadian citizens upon
the coming into force of the Act (popularly known as the "1947 Act"
due to the year it came into force), citizenship afterwards was generally
acquired as follows: birth in Canada (except where either parent is a
representative of a foreign government, their employee, or anyone granted
diplomatic privileges or immunities and neither parent is a citizen or
permanent resident), naturalization in Canada after five years'
residence as a landed immigrant, grant of citizenship to a foreign woman
married to a Canadian man after one year's residence as a landed immigrant, grant
of citizenship to women who lost British subject status prior to 1947 upon
marriage to a foreign man or his subsequent naturalization, registration
of a child born outside Canada to a Canadian "responsible parent"
(being the father, if the child was born in wedlock, or the mother, if the
child was born out of wedlock and was residing with the mother, if the father
was deceased or if custody of the child had been awarded to the mother by court
order)
Loss of Canadian citizenship
generally occurred in the following cases: naturalization outside Canada,
in the case of a minor, naturalization of a parent, service in
foreign armed forces, naturalized Canadians who lived outside Canada for
10 years and did not file a declaration of retention, where a Canadian
had acquired that status by descent from a Canadian parent, and who was either
not lawfully admitted to Canada for permanent residence on the commencement of
the Act or was born outside Canada afterwards, loss of citizenship could occur on
the person's 22nd birthday unless the person had filed a declaration of
retention between their 21st and 22nd birthday and renounced any previous
nationality they possessed. Although Canada restricted dual citizenship
between 1947 and 1977, there were some situations where Canadians could
nevertheless legally possess another citizenship. For example, migrants
becoming Canadian citizens were not asked to formally prove that they had
ceased to hold the nationality of their former country. Similarly children born
in Canada to non-Canadian parents were not under any obligation to renounce a
foreign citizenship they had acquired by descent. Holding a foreign passport
did not in itself cause loss of Canadian citizenship.
A notable exception to the 1947
act is the annexation of Newfoundland to Canada in 1949, whereby all native or
naturalized Newfoundlanders were granted Canadian citizenship under the laws
stated in the citizenship act, upon the date of union on 1 April 1949.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Citizenship_Act,_1946
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