JamesLecturerG.LecturerShieldsLecturerInformaworldPatterns of PrejudiceScott, James Brown. 1930. Nationality: Jus soli or jus sanguinis. The American Journal of International Law 24 (1): 58-64.
(b) Certain states follow the rule of jus soli, maintaining that the place of birth determines the nationality. FromProject Gutenberg (c) Other states follow sometimes the jus sanguinis, sometimes jus soli, and sometimes modifications of these laws. ...
The Continued Whiteness of Belonging: Modern Racialization of Jus Soli and Jus SanguinisHughey, Matthew W
Matthew CauseyPalgrave Macmillan UKCausey, Matthew. "Jus Soli/Jus Sanguinis: The Biopolitics of Performing Irishness." Crossroads: Performance Studies and Irish Culture. Eds. Sara Brady and Fintan Walsh. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009.
Blood or Soil: Jus Sanguinis or Jus SoliLynn AthertonBloxham
citizen of the United Statesnative citizennaturalized citizenPresident of the United States of Americalaw of nationsinternational lawUnited States of AmericaDiscover that before the Fourteenth Amendment, both jus soli and jus sanguinis were followed in the United State of America. However, with the ...
Reimagining Citizenship in the Black Mediterranean: From Jus Sanguinis to Jus Soli in Contemporary Italy?How do citizenship claims—those, for example, of Italian born migrants with heritage from Italy's former colonies of Eritrea and Somalia—encourage redefinitions of national belonging? This chapter...
fromjus sanguinis(“right of blood”), which grants citizenship on the basis of the citizenship possessed by one’s parent or parents. By the early 21st century, 35 countries were granting unrestricted birthright citizenship, and an additional 40 countries were providing birthright citizenship with ...