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The British Nationality Act 1981 was an Act of Parliament passed by the British Parliament concerning British nationality. It has been the basis of British nationality law since 1 January 1983.
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In the mid-1970s the British Government decided to update the nationality code, which had been significantly amended since the British Nationality Act 1948 came into force on 1 January 1949. In 1977, a Green Paper was produced outlining options for reform of the nationality code. This was followed in 1980 by a White Paper containing the government's specific plans for change. The British Nationality Act 1981 received Royal Assent on 30 October 1981 and came into force on 1 January 1983.
Subsequently, the British Nationality Act has been significantly amended, including:
The Act had a number of purposes.
The Act reclassified Citizenship of the United Kingdom and Colonies (CUKC) into three categories:
Since 1962, with the passage of the Commonwealth Immigrants Act 1962, not all CUKCs had the Right of Abode in the United Kingdom. The Act sought to restore once again the link between citizenship and right of abode by providing that British citizenship - held by those with a close connection with the United Kingdom, Isle of Man and Channel Islands - would automatically carry a right of abode in the UK. The other categories of British nationality would not hold such status based on nationality, although in some cases would do so under the immigration laws.
The Green Paper of 1977 originally proposed just two categories of British nationality, British citizenship and British Overseas citizenship. However, the British Dependent Territory governments successfully lobbied for an additional category of nationality which would cater for those with close connections to any of the British territories.
The Act also modified the application of Jus soli in British nationality. Prior to the Act coming into force, any person born in Britain (with limited exceptions such as children of diplomats and enemy aliens) was entitled to British Citizenship. After the Act came into force, it was necessary for at least one parent of a United Kingdom-born child to be a British citizen or "settled" in the United Kingdom (permanent resident).
As a result, even following the coming into force of the Act, the vast majority of children born in the United Kingdom still acquire British citizenship at birth. Special provisions are made for non-British UK born children to acquire British citizenship in certain circumstances.
The Act made a variety of other changes to the law:
In some cases, transitional arrangements were made that preserved certain aspects of the old legislation. Most of these expired on 31 December 1987, five years after the Act came into force.
Critics argued that one of the main political motivations behind the new law was to deny most Hong Kong-born Chinese people the right of residency in the United Kingdom in the time preceding the Sino-British Joint Declaration in 1985 and later the hand-over of Hong Kong (then the largest British Colony), to Chinese sovereignty in 1997. However, persons from Hong Kong had lost the automatic right to live in the United Kingdom in 1962 and the Act did not change the substance of that fact.
The act is also seen as a minor factor in precipitating the Falklands War, as Argentina apparently saw the move as a sign of disengagement of the United Kingdom from its Falklands dependency.[citation needed] After the war, full British citizenship was granted to the Falkland Islands.
Other criticisms were levelled at the time at the removal of the automatic right to citizenship by birth in the United Kingdom. However, due to the fact that UK-born children of permanent residents are automatically British, the number of non-British children born in the United Kingdom is relatively small. Special provisions made in the Act for those who do not have another nationality, and for those who lived a long time in the United Kingdom, have meant there is little pressure for any change to the current law. Similar legislation has been enacted in Australia (1986), Republic of Ireland (2005) and New Zealand (2006).
Official text of the statute as amended and in force today within the United Kingdom, from the UK Statute Law Database. (Note that this website does not include the most recent amendments to this Act.)
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