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If the child meets the requirements of Section 3(2) or Section 3(5) above, but for the fact that the parent was not a British citizen by descent at the time of the birth of the child, probably a registration under Section 3(1).
When visiting the UK?
British citizens need to prove "ordinary residence" to use the NHS free of charge.
Also keep in mind that your daughter, even though a British citizen, must be resident in the UK for at least three years before the start of the first year of any higher/further education course to qualify for student loans and Home Student rates.Ordinary residence
There is no legal definition of ‘ordinary residence’. It refers to the place you normally live for the time being, as long as there is a degree of continuity about your stay.
The main test is set down in a case called Shah where the meaning of the words ‘ordinarily resident’ was considered. The ruling found that:
An individual who is living lawfully in the United Kingdom voluntarily and for settled purposes as part of the regular order of their life for the time being, whether of long or short duration, with an identifiable purpose for their residence here which has a sufficient degree of continuity to be properly described as settled.
Official guidance advises that 'ordinary residence' should be given its everyday and natural meaning based on the facts of each case and subject to interpretation by the courts.
No. It is within or outside the UK that matters. That was the same even when the UK was within the EU.
Different countries have different ideas of which people belong to that nation (another way of thinking about citizenship). The etymological root of words like nation and naturalisation is the Latin word "natus", which relates to birth, being born in a tribe/culture, etc.
True of many countries. I believe that Italy and Poland allow automatic citizenship by indefinite generations of descent. Which is why so many Americans attempt to trace their ancestry to an Italian or Polish ancestor. Effectively a multi-generation EU passport.
Not when it comes to things like access to resources in the UK.
Thanks Secret.Simon for your response. I looked up the section 3(1) and it seems to be no go route. For clarity this is my story - mother got citizenship through ukf, currently living abroad (never lived in uk). Child was born prior to even mother obtaining British citizenship. Hence mother is citizen of the UK by descent due to being born abroad.secret.simon wrote: ↑Sat Jul 17, 2021 5:19 amIf the child meets the requirements of Section 3(2) or Section 3(5) above, but for the fact that the parent was not a British citizen by descent at the time of the birth of the child, probably a registration under Section 3(1).
It doesnt apply to you.