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Appendix No. 1 An analysis of the laws of various State1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 May 2017

Abstract

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Type
Part I. Nationality
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1929

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Footnotes

1

This analysis has been made with the assistance of Raymond T. Yingling, Henry B. Hazard, and Eugene C Rowley, Jr. It is intended to serve merely as a guide and not as an authoritative statement of the effect of the laws referred to. In spite of the care with which it has been prepared, some errors are possible, and some provisions of the laws may have been mistaken.

References

Page 81 note * Citizenship restricted to persons of negro descent.

Page 102 note * Involving conBent of government.

Page 107 note * It is important to note that the laws of a number of States, including several South and Central Amerioan countries, oontain no express provisions concerning the status of alien women who marry their nationals.

Page 108 note * The laws of some States contain no specific provisions concerning this subject.

Page 109 note * The laws of some states, such as Denmark and Norway, contain no specific provision that nationality ia lost by a woman through marriage to an alien, but certain broad provisions that nationality is lost upon the acquisition of the nationality of another state.

Page 110 note * Under the laws of the states listed under this heading, with the exception of the United States and Esthonia, a woman does not lose her nationality by marriage to an alien in any case unless she gains the nationality of her husband.

Page 110 note ** It is important to note that the laws of a number of States, including several South and Central American countries, contain no express provisions concerning the status of a woman national whose husband aoquires the nationality of a foreign State. However, a number of such States have laws with provisions to the effect that the acquisition of the nationality of a foreign State by their nationals results in their expatriation.