"Citizenship" Essays and Research Papers

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    of citizenship from May Joseph’s article Nomadic Identities: The Performance of Citizenship‚ can be used to analyze the different forms of citizenship that are presented in the film‚ Bend it Like Beckham‚ directed by Gurinder Chadha. Citizenship is typically referred to as someone being considered a member of a country under specific laws. This general idea of citizenship is further analyzed in Nomadic Identities: The Performance of Citizenship. The article presents the idea that citizenship is found

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    citizens of the United States; however‚ most aspects of participatory citizenship‚ especially political participation‚ have generally been restricted to white men. Participatory citizenship has historically included the ability to vote and enter politics‚ the right and duty to sit on juries‚ and the right and obligation to aid in national defense. Over the course of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries‚ full participatory citizenship has come to include the right to expect and demand a degree of social

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    MNN3701 Module slides

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    CORPORATE CITIZENSHIP MNN3701 FACILITATOR: Ms Tracey Cohen Agenda: • • • • • • • • • Introduction and ground rules SU 1 – “Imagine” SU 2 – Course Overview SU 3 – Sustainable Development SU 4 – Corporate Citizenship Defined SU 5 – Milton Friedman and the Business of Business SU 6 – The “Why?” of Corporate Citizenship SU 7 – The “How?” of Corporate Citizenship SU 8 – Corporate Citizenship and Leadership 2 Contact Details Tracey Cohen Lecturer: Department of Business Management : 012 429 6136

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    citizens‚" is defined to include "those who are citizens of the Philippines from birth without having to perform any act to acquire or perfect their Philippine citizenship." Herein‚ the date‚ month and year of birth of FPJ appeared to be 20 August 1939 during the regime of the 1935 Constitution. Through its history‚ four modes of acquiring citizenship - naturalization‚ jus soli‚ res judicata and jus sanguinis – had been in vogue. Only two‚ i.e.‚ jus soli and jus sanguinis‚ could qualify a person to being

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    2. Can Citizenship be lost? How? How can be reacquired? A Filipino citizen may lose his citizenship in any of the following ways and/or  events:(1)By naturalization in a foreign country;(2) By express renunciation of citizenship;(3)By subscribing to an oath of allegiance to support the constitution or laws of a foreign country upon attaining twenty-one years of age or more: Provided‚ however‚ That a Filipino may not divest himself of Philippine citizenship in any manner while the Republic of

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    from the Dominican Republic should identify with one or two cultures. The concept of dual citizenship would allow Dominican-Americans to identify with two cultures. Although some would argue that dual citizenship is flawed because individuals should identify with one culture or the other‚ dual citizenship gave Dominican-Americans several advantages that outweighed the drawbacks. First‚ dual citizenship allowed Dominican-Americans the ability to travel back and forth between the United States

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    APPLICATION FOR ADMISSION TO THE PHILIPPINE BAR‚ vs. VICENTE D. CHING‚ applicant. R E S O L U T I O N   KAPUNAN‚ J.: Can a legitimate child born under the 1935 Constitution of a Filipino mother and an alien father validly elect Philippine citizenship fourteen (14) years after he has reached the age of majority? This is the question sought to be resolved in the present case involving the application for admission to the Philippine Bar of Vicente D. Ching. The facts of this case are as follows:

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    are entitled to its protection. The idea of citizenship‚ or the rights and duties of citizens‚ dates back more twenty-five hundred years to ancient Greece and Rome. Citizenship gave people legal rights and allowed them to take part in government. During those times citizenship was only for men who owned property. Citizens’ duties to the government included paying taxes and serving in the armed forces. Over the centuries‚ other ideas about citizenship replaced the Greek and Roman views. In the seventeen

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    witnessed cultural citizenship through my personal experience. When I first moved to the United States I have seen a lot of different cultures‚ not just American culture but cultures from all over the world. I still eat the same food‚ listen to the same music‚ and speak the same language as if I was still living back home in Jamaica. Cultural citizenship is to be a citizen of a country and don’t participate in cultural events or politics in that particular country of citizenship. This essay is based

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    studies. 1. Citizenship Citizenship has been defined by Margaret (2008‚ p.53) as a “state of being a citizen of a particular social‚ political‚ national‚ or human resource community “. The term describing all citizens as a whole is citizenry. In law‚ citizenship denotes a link between an individual and a state. Under international law‚ citizenship is synonymous to nationality‚ although the two may have different meanings under national law. A person who does not have citizenship in any state is

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