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Confused by citizenship by descent 2009 laws

emr2102

Star Member
Mar 13, 2018
57
9
Hi,
I was hoping someone might be able to help me understand the 2009 laws limiting citizenship by descent which is relative to my situation of my family wanting to move to Canada.


1- I am not Canadian
2- My husband was born outside of Canada to Canadian parents (they moved back to Canada shortly after his birth and he spent half his life living in canada) He has a Canadian citizenship certificate
3- we have three children, all born after 2009

So my question is.... are our three children able to get Canadian citizenship through my husband. I understand the 2009 law to state that the parent must be born in Canada but it also mentions if the parent became a naturalized Canadian citizen before they were born... does this apply to my husband?

Thanks for any advice you can share
 

meyakanor

Hero Member
Jul 26, 2013
519
109
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Hi,
I was hoping someone might be able to help me understand the 2009 laws limiting citizenship by descent which is relative to my situation of my family wanting to move to Canada.


1- I am not Canadian
2- My husband was born outside of Canada to Canadian parents (they moved back to Canada shortly after his birth and he spent half his life living in canada) He has a Canadian citizenship certificate
3- we have three children, all born after 2009

So my question is.... are our three children able to get Canadian citizenship through my husband. I understand the 2009 law to state that the parent must be born in Canada but it also mentions if the parent became a naturalized Canadian citizen before they were born... does this apply to my husband?

Thanks for any advice you can share
As you said, at least one of the parents must either be born in Canada, or a naturalized Canadian citizen.

Your husband was not born in Canada (I'm assuming this is the case), and he's also not a naturalized Canadian citizen (he was born outside Canada from Canadian parents), so he cannot pass on citizenship to his children.

He can, however, sponsor the kids for permanent residence (before they turn 21), and eventually, they can become citizens.
 

Seym

Champion Member
Nov 6, 2017
1,792
893