Dual Citizenship
by Rob - December 8th, 2007.Filed under: Uncategorized.
I often get email from students asking me questions about my science-fiction writing, but today’s email contained questions from a student on an entirely different topic: dual citizenship (I hold both Canadian and American citizenship):
In my Honors Colloquium on immigration, the discussion arose about the merits and problems with dual citizenship. My instructor said he was against anyone having dual citizenship because of the loyalty issues.
If you have time, could you quickly answer a few questions for me?
How easy was it for your parents to get you dual citizenship? Were there extra steps they had to prove to get US Citizenship for you?
Do you find having dual citizenship is a benefit? Are there any concerns others have when they know you have dual citizenship?
Would my instructor be correct in that loyalty to both countries would be an issue, though Canada and the United States are not enemies?
And finally, concerning global issues and politics now, do you feel that dual citizenship should be as easy to acquire as it was forty years ago, or do you lean more toward limiting new dual citizenships to the point that they are almost eliminated?
My reply:
My mother was a US-citizen graduate student temporarily resident in Canada when I was born; mine was a foreign-soil birth to an American national temporarily abroad. She reported in person to the U.S. embassy in Ottawa upon giving birth in that city, and had my birth registered as such, which, in 1960, was sufficient to grant dual citizenship.
The benefits are obvious: I can freely live and work anywhere in Canada or the United States, and since my job is portable, and since I travel so much, that’s a real plus. No one has ever reacted negatively to my circumstances, which, frankly, simply aren’t that unusual anymore.
(The downsides: I file tax returns with both the IRS and the Canada Revenue Agency (although because of reciprocal treaties, I’m not doubly taxed, but it’s still a pain); when US selective-service registration was reactivated in 1980, I had to — and did — register and was at risk of being drafted.)
Your instructor may be right about loyalty but is misguided in asserting its value, I feel; many of the world’s problems today are caused by blind allegiance to a single country or block — whether it’s Iranian extremists, or “Homeland” security. When the European Union decided to simply walk away from a millennium of warfare among its members, the first step was making citizenship essentially EU-wide, eliminating much jingoistic partisanship.
And, just as the spread of multinational companies has ended the threat of much international war (it’s impossible to conceive of the U.S. and Japan ever being in a shooting war again, since so many businesses have major presences in both countries), the deployment of people around the globe with larger-than-local allegiance gives us the wider perspective needed to tackle environmental issues that know no borders.
Indeed, your instructor is a bit of a throwback and misguided; it’s easier today to acquire dual citizenship as an American than it was 40 years ago; 40 years ago, you essentially had to be born with it (as I was) — now, the United States, very much in response to pressure from the rest of the world, which has long had a more enlightened attitude about this, much more readily recognizes dual citizenship.
Forty years ago, my mother could get her children dual US-Canadian citizenship, but there was no mechanism for her herself to obtain it; today, she could easily have both if she wanted to (and my great friend, SF writer Robert Charles Wilson, born in the US, but resident in Canada for four decades now, got his Canadian citizenship last year without the US requiring him to relinquish his American citizenship).
The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site
June 13th, 2023 at 3:29 pm
Fan of yours and found this post through wikipedia. I think it’s interesting to go back to it after over a decade. I agree with a lot of what you said here but the line “it’s impossible to conceive of the U.S. and Japan ever being in a shooting war again, since so many businesses have major presences in both countries” hasn’t aged perfectly. China and Taiwan have countless businesses in each country and yet it seems that they are bound for war. Same thing with the U.S. and China. Russia and the EU certainly were very intertangled when it came to energy and some Germans even defended North Stream 2 by saying that it would provide leverage over Russia. I think business relationships unfortunately aren’t enough to stop war.
I think the biggest challenge of dual citizenship is what happens when you are citizen of two countries that go to war with one another. Then renunciation becomes an important tool, but some countries don’t allow for it. The UN Universal Declaration of Human rights does mention that “No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his nationality nor denied the right to change his nationality” but it doesn’t talk about someone having two nationalities, so it is still an unresolved subject matter as far as I can tell.