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As far as I aware, the only ways to attain UK Citizenship without being subject to the Good Character Requirement are:
I would be very interested in learning more about this. Do ask your colleague for more information. I find it hard to believe that the Home Office would forgo £1300 worth of fees because somebody with PR was selected for jury duty.xavieryves wrote: ↑Sun Jul 08, 2018 6:24 pmA colleaugue of mine informed me that she had her PR changed to Citizenship unsolicited after taking part in the jury service. She did not go into the specifics of it/ her situation when I asked how they knew so this is pure hearsay.
Where on earth did you get that? To start with, there is no such thing as a Royal Decree in the UK. There are other royal instruments (Proclamation, Order in Council, etc), but no Royal Decree and all of them (except minor ones, such as a grant of a coat of arms to a Royal Prince) require the agreement of the Privy Council (essentially, the C abinet).
Character is not taken into account for jury service. So long as you are on the Electoral Roll, you can be selected for jury service. A Commonwealth student who has been in the UK for two months has an equal chance of being drawn for jury service as a geriatric person born in the UK.xavieryves wrote: ↑Mon Jul 09, 2018 1:29 pmI certainly find the juxtaposition intersting, that on one hand your character is not good enough for British Citizenship yet it's good enough to participate in the British justice system.