Assignment 1 Max words 1500 Citizenship‚ Diversity and the Public Services Intro A citizen is a person who is part of the community and does not except any sort of discrimination towards peoples age‚ believes‚ language and religion etc. and does not let people feel at any sort of disadvantage because of their age example and treats people equally whether they are citizens or not. Citizens should tolerates people’s views on things like most Muslim people
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In order to solve illegal immigration is to end birthright citizenship. Birthright Citizenship is the ability of permit automatic citizenship to the children born in the United States. The 14th Amendment‚ which states‚ “All persons born or naturalized in the United States‚ and subject to jurisdiction therefore‚ are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” The difficult situation with birthright citizenship is that it creates a allure to others who are willing to break
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few nations give out citizenship to any kids that are born on their land and United States is one of the countries that provides citizenship to people that are born on their land. Although people from various countries come to United States of America to give birth to their babies and apply for the citizenship through that‚ I argue that the U.S government should not provide citizenship
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Fey Engl 1301 Feb. 01 2013 What Citizenship Means To Me So what does citizenship means to me? Is it just a piece of paper that says you are a citizen of a country or does it mean something more in a deeper level. When I was just a little boy my mother always talks about that when we move to the United States we should apply for citizenship immediately. As I was growing up here in the United States I slowly understand what citizenship means to me. Being a citizen for me is fulfilling
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Global Citizenship Begins at Home [Thanks‚ ladies and gentlemen. I appreciate this opportunity of standing here and delivering my speech. ] I have read a small piece of writing on BBS‚ which impressed me a lot. It says: “Someone think that Holland is so small that even a child can cover it with his own hand on the map. But what they don’t understand is that the Atlantic Ocean is like the front yard of our country‚ while all of the Europe is our backyard.” Living in an increasingly interdependent
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Illegal Aliens and Birthright Citizenship The United States Constitution is the supreme law of our great country. Found in our Constitution‚ is the fourteenth amendment. But‚ did the authors of the Fourteenth Amendment want or not want to grant citizenship to every person who happened to be born on U.S. soil? And does "subject to the jurisdiction" mean something different from "born in the United States‚"? First‚ let’s see exactly what the fourteenth amendment states: “All persons born or naturalized
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about the idea of state and citizenship is thousands of year old and even today there is no absolute agreement on exactly what it means. However‚ the concept of state and citizenship has suddenly emerged as a central theme in social science literature both as a normative concept and a social phenomenon. The idea of the state and citizenship has undergone numerous changes‚ some positive and some negative also‚ since its conception. The concept of state and citizenship has emerged in the 7th and 8th
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EU CITIZENSHIP 1. THE SCOPE OF THE RIGHTS TO FREE MOVEMENT (a) EU CITIZENSHIP: “EU Citizenship rights once given‚ cannot be denied or claimed to be abused” The free movement of persons is said to be one of the four fundamental freedoms of European Union law‚ along with the free movement of goods‚ services‚ and capital‚ and one of the essential components of the internal market. i) The primary legislation: Treaty on European Union (Lisbon consolidated): Art 3 (2): “The Union
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EU citizenship Lecture 1 * Art 26 TFEU contains the free movement of goods‚ services and persons. * Residence directive moved it away from just an economic union * Used to just be people who were economically active people but not non-economical active people can reside such as students‚ retired people and people who can support themselves. Although you could not be a burden on the state. These directives have been repealed but the legacy lives on. * Article 20 TFEU‚ talks about
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Assignment 2 ACTIVE CITIZENSHIP - A means of exclusion? It has been claimed that schools should be society ’s chosen agency for training for citizenship ’. Discuss the link between citizenship and education and ways in which this relationship has changed over the 20th century. Illustrate your discussion with reference to aspects of Australia education and students with disabilities. ACTIVE CITIZENSHIP - A means of exclusion? Although institutions such as the family and church play
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