Was bestimmt die Staatsbürgerschaft? 🌍 Land gegen Blut

    Die auf der Karte angegebenen Länder gelten als solche ohne Einschränkungen. Beispielsweise gewährt Pakistan Landrechte, aber Kinder von Flüchtlingen haben keinen Anspruch darauf, oder in Spanien gilt die Bedingung, dass ein Elternteil in Spanien geboren wurde oder wenn die Eltern staatenlos sind

    Folgt Ihr Land der Herrschaft des Landes oder der Herrschaft des Blutes?

    Von Informerbytes

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    19 Kommentare

    1. Defiant-Complaint-13 on

      rule of the blood is better, but only if you don’t allow immigration

    2. NoteCarefully on

      Will there ever come a time when it will make more sense for North and South American countries to widely switch to Jus Sanguinis?

    3. Probably an ignorant question, but was this to entice people to move to the new world?

    4. mastabaitaa on

      I’m israeli so here we give citizenship to anyone jewish, no matter where you were born. Would that be by blood or by land kinda confused about that

    5. Reasonable_Ninja5708 on

      This map oversimplifies the topic. Many countries have both. The US grants citizenship to a baby born to American citizens abroad. Some European countries also give citizenship to babies born to stateless parents on their soil.

    6. PostNutPrivilege on

      It should always be blood, unless gotten later in life. Which you can already do in a ton of places, making the map incorrect. Such as Japan for example. You can get citizenship there. But without renouncing, I do believe it should be blood only

    7. rule of blood in countries like Australia and New Zealand are just weird. How blood of indigenous people there turned color without their consent is weird.

    8. The map is not good but I am all in favour of moving New Zealand to the new location. It would shorten a lot of flights.

    9. HarryLewisPot on

      In Australia, you are given citizenship on your 10th birthday if you’re born there and lived there continuously since birth.

    10. Rwanda, Burundi, Malawi: No rights for anyone

      Edit: also El Salvador, Cyprus, Timor Leste

    11. CalligrapherTime5638 on

      Here in Colombia there was a whole problem with that, when the Venezuelan migration crisis occurred, many Venezuelan women were pregnant and gave birth here in Colombia, but they could not register the baby since the parents were Venezuelan and here you only get nationality if you have ancestry here if I’m not wrong, so those children were literally stateless and the government had to give nationality to the children in the end because Venezuela much less was going to give nationality to the children.

      Complete chaos.

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