Protecting Minorities from De Facto Statelessness: Birthright Citizenship in the United States

Michael Sullivan
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Abstract

Birthright citizenship is the subject of intense political debate in the United States because of its connection to the debate over unauthorised immigration and the inclusion of national minorities. Similar debates have taken place in other common law countries, leading to the restriction of jus soli birthright citizenship in the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand and Ireland. The Supreme Court of the United States and United States Department of State’s interpretation of the Citizenship Clause in § 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment ensures that all ‘persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States’, including the children of unauthorised immigrants. This article argues that the rule of jus soli birthright citizenship in the United States is rooted in an older understanding of the birthright of native-born British subjects, and later, American citizens, to enjoy the birthright of protections and an ever-expanding set of rights based on where they were born, regardless of the status of their parents. Stated in a way that included the children of slaves and immigrants as citizens based on their birthplace alone, jus soli birthright citizenship in the United States remains a powerful tool of inclusion for marginalised minority groups.
保护少数民族免于事实上的无国籍状态:美国的出生公民权
出生公民权是美国激烈政治辩论的主题,因为它与非法移民和接纳少数民族的辩论有关。在其他普通法国家也发生了类似的辩论,导致英国、澳大利亚、新西兰和爱尔兰限制出生公民权。美国最高法院和美国国务院对第十四修正案第1条公民条款的解释确保所有“在美国出生或归化并受其管辖的人都是美国公民”,包括非法移民的子女。本文认为,美国的出生地法出生公民权规则根植于对土生土长的英国臣民和后来的美国公民享有与生俱来的权利的一种较早的理解,即享有与生俱来的保护权利和一套不断扩大的权利,这些权利基于他们的出生地,而不管他们父母的地位如何。在美国,仅根据出生地就将奴隶和移民的子女纳入公民行列的出生公民权,仍然是边缘化少数群体融入社会的有力工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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