Dominican Republic nationality law

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Dominican Republic nationality law is regulated by the 2015 Constitution, Law 1683 of 1948, the 2014 Naturalization Law #169-14, and relevant treaties to which the Dominican Republic is a signatory.[1] These laws determine who is, or is eligible to be, a citizen of the Dominican Republic. The legal means to acquire nationality and formal membership in a nation differ from the relationship of rights and obligations between a national and the nation, known as citizenship.[2][3][4] Nationality in the Dominican Republic is typically obtained either on the principle of jus soli, i.e. by birth in the Dominican Republic to Dominican parents or legal resident foreigners; or under the rules of jus sanguinis, i.e. by birth abroad to a parent with Dominican nationality. It can also be granted to a permanent resident who has lived in the country for a given period of time through naturalization or for a foreigner who has provided exceptional service to the nation.[5]

By birthright

Dominicans may acquire nationality through birth or naturalization.[5]

The 2015 Constitution specifies in Article 18, Section 1, that those entitled to birthright nationality are:[6]

  • Those born within the territory of the Dominican Republic, who are not children of diplomats, illegal aliens, or foreigners in transit;[6]
  • Those born abroad to a Dominican parent, who upon reaching their eighteenth birthday choose Dominican nationality and renounce their former nationality or obtain dual citizenship; or[6]
  • Those who had birthright citizenship according to the laws before the current constitution entered in to force.[6]

By naturalization

Naturalization requires completion of an application of request that is supported by the requisite documents to establish eligibility. These are submitted to the Ministry of the Interior and Police (Spanish: Ministerio de Interior y Policía) for processing and approved by the Directorate of Naturalization.[7] Requirements, detailed in the 1948 Law #1683, include that applicants must be adults who have attained the age of 18, or 16 if married or authorized by a legal guardian, who have established a residence within the territory for a minimum of 2 years. The 2015 Constitution in Article 18, Section 1, and Law #1683 specify that those who can naturalize are:[8]

  • Foreigners who have established temporary residence for 5 years and then permanent residence for 2 years in the country.[9] [10] [8]
  • Foreign men who have had legal residence for six months and who are married to a Dominican woman;[8]
  • Foreign women who are married to a Dominican man may obtain a waiver to residency requirements at the discretion of the President of the Dominican Republic;[8]
  • Adoptees of Dominican parents;[8]
  • Foreign wives and minor children obtain automatic naturalization through the naturalization of their spouse without meeting residency requirements;[8]
  • Foreign-born adults of naturalized Dominicans who have established residence for one year; or[8]
  • Persons who, at the discretion of the President, are deemed to have provided exceptional services to the nation.[11]

Loss of Dominican nationality

Naturalized Dominicans can lose their nationality by leaving the country for ten years, or establishing residency abroad within one year of being naturalized. Accepting employment from a foreign government, committing crimes against the state, behaving immorally, or having committed fraud in a naturalization application. They can also have their nationality suspended for the period in which they may be incarcerated for capital crimes.[11]

Haitian-Dominicans

In 2004, the Nationality Law (Ley 285–04) was modified and defined temporary immigrant laborers and foreign residents of the border between Haiti and the Dominican Republic as transient regardless of how long they had resided in the country. The law opened debate on whether children who had been born in the Dominican Republic could be citizens if their parents were considered to be temporary immigrants.[12] In the 2005 case Yean and Bosico vs. Dominican Republic challenged the law under the pretext that denying the right of nationality to the two girls rendered them stateless, impacting their ability to attend school, and made them socially vulnerable. The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights ruled in favor of the girls and ordered the Dominican Republic to modify their laws to comply with provisions of the American Convention on Human Rights.[13][14] In part, the ruling stated "la condición del nacimiento en el territorio del Estado es la única a ser demostrada para la adquisición de la nacionalidad, en lo que se refiere a personas que no tendrían derecho a otra nacionalidad" ("the condition of birth in the territory of the nation is the only one to be demonstrated for the acquisition of nationality, with regard to persons who would not have the right to another nationality").[15]

In 2010, the constitution was modified to include all undocumented residents as transients.[16] Debate regarding the verbiage to be used in the amendment focused solely on Haitian migrant workers. Article 18, as adopted stated that Dominican citizens were "people born in the national territory, with the exception of the sons and daughters of foreigners who are members of diplomatic and consular legations, foreigners who are in transit or reside illegally in Dominican territory".[12] In a ruling [es] on the case of Juliana Deguis against the Central Electoral Board, issued in 2013, by the Constitutional Court of the Dominican Republic anyone born in the country after 1929 to foreign parents who were in transit did not have Dominican nationality.[17] The court advised authorities to audit birth records beginning on June 21, 1929 to the present and revoke Dominican nationality from anyone whose parents were classed as in transit.[18] The ruling left around 200,000 people, primarily those of Haitian descent, in danger of stateless.[16]

The international community, including Amnesty International, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and Human Rights Watch, expressed concern about the ruling.[19] In response, in 2014 the government passed a Naturalization Law (Ley 169–14) which divided foreigners who had been born in the Dominican Republic between 1929 and 2007 into two categories. The first group, of approximately 55,000 people, were children of undocumented migrants whose births had been recorded in the Civil Registry. They would be granted legal amnesty, their actions during the period when they believed themselves to be Dominican would remain legal and binding, and they would be issued Dominican identification cards, as citizens.[20] The second group, of approximately 53,000 people, was made up of children who had been born in the country but whose births had not been recorded in the Civil Registry. They were required to register as foreigners and could be naturalized if they could provide documentation proving their birth and residency in the country prior to the 2015 deadline. Only 8,755 people in the second group were able to provide evidence and register.[6] A third group of people, those who were born between 2007 and 2010 were required to register as foreigners and could apply for ordinary naturalization after two years.[6][21]

The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights ruled in 2014 that the judgement in the Deguis case and Law 169-14 violated the American Convention and ordered the Dominican Republic to adopt measures to nullify the portions of legal documents that were contrary to the American Convention.[22] According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, 288,466 undocumented immigrants, primarily of Haitian descent, applied for residency and work permits after passage of Law 169–14, but only a few hundred permits were granted. Immigration officers deported 15,754 undocumented immigrants to Haiti between August 2015 and January 2016 and another 113,320, persons voluntarily left during the same period. The law disproportionately affected Haitian-Dominican women because though they automatically derive citizenship if they marry a Dominican national, their undocumented status brings the validity of their children's nationality into question. As undocumented, women in this situation often must work in sectors where their employment is unreported.[23]

Dual nationality

History

References

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