I recently learned that my US-born mother received Canadian citizenship in 2003 through delayed registration. She was born in wedlock to my Canadian born grandmother in 1968 and was originally not entitled to Canadian citizenship because of the draconian law against women that was in place at the time.
I have read enough about the Citizenship Act to understand that my mother was a citizen by way of grant and her ability to pass it down to the next generation was limited to children born after the grant. I was born in 1993 in the US and thus not able for citizenship by descent. But there's one thing that confuses me- the 2009 act redefined her citizenship as being by descent, retroactive to her date of birth. I've tried googling this and I can't find out what that means, does it give her the ability to pass down citizenship to children born before 2009 or is it just a symbolic gesture of equality?
I have read enough about the Citizenship Act to understand that my mother was a citizen by way of grant and her ability to pass it down to the next generation was limited to children born after the grant. I was born in 1993 in the US and thus not able for citizenship by descent. But there's one thing that confuses me- the 2009 act redefined her citizenship as being by descent, retroactive to her date of birth. I've tried googling this and I can't find out what that means, does it give her the ability to pass down citizenship to children born before 2009 or is it just a symbolic gesture of equality?