expatriation

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expatriation

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

expatriation loss of nationality . Such loss is usually, although not necessarily, voluntary. Generally it applies to those persons who have renounced nationality and citizenship in one country to become citizens or subjects of another. According to U.S. law, for example, a citizen who becomes naturalized in a foreign state is automatically expatriated. In addition, expatriation occurs when a naturalized citizen resides in his native land for two years or elsewhere outside the United States for five years, or when any citizen serves in the public employment or military of a foreign state. Prior to 1922 an American woman who married an alien was expatriated, but in that year the Cable Act nullified that provision and stipulated that a woman may retain her citizenship when marrying an alien "unless she makes a formal renunciation of her citizenship." The United States, in common with other countries, forbids voluntary expatriation in time of war. Expatriation may also occur involuntarily, as when a government chooses to renounce its obligations to individuals who desert in wartime. Such persons are stateless until naturalization under some other government takes place. A more general type of involuntary expatriation is the loss of nationality that occurs with the cession or conquest of a territory. The common law view that one's allegiance cannot be renounced without the state's permission prevailed until 1868 when the United States challenged this doctrine in order to protect its naturalized immigrants against the claims of their native states, which did not recognize the right of subjects to expatriate themselves. Congress declared voluntary expatriation to be "a natural and inherent right of all people," and announced that the United States would protect its naturalized citizens abroad, even in their native countries. Great Britain abandoned the common-law interpretation in 1870. Many other nations, however, including France and Russia, do not recognize expatriation. The United States at present has treaties operating with most European nations concerning that and other conflicting interpretations of citizenship.

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"expatriation." The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2008. Encyclopedia.com. 10 Jul. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

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expatriate

The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology | 1996 | | © The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology 1996, originally published by Oxford University Press 1996. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

expatriate withdraw from one's native country. XVIII. f. medL. expatriāre, -āt-, f. EX-1 + patria native land.
Hence expatriate sb., expatriation XIX.

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expatriate

The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English | 2009 | © The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English 2009, originally published by Oxford University Press 2009. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

ex·pa·tri·ate • n. / eksˈpātrēit/ a person who lives outside their native country: American expatriates in London. • adj. / eksˈpātrēit/ (of a person) living outside their native country: expatriate writers and artists. • v. / eksˈpātrēˌāt/ [intr.] settle oneself abroad: candidates should be willing to expatriate. DERIVATIVES: ex·pa·tri·a·tion / eksˌpātrēˈāshən/ n.

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Free newspaper and magazine articles

Free Article Expatriation tax proposals analyzed.(Expatriation Tax Task Force)(Brief Article)
Newspaper article from: CPA Letter; 6/1/2002
Free Article Citizenship and those who leave; the politics of emigration and expatriation.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News; 8/1/2007
Free Article "Payin' one's dues": expatriation as personal experience and paradigm in the works of James Baldwin.
Magazine article from: African American Review; 3/22/1999

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Related articles from newspapers, magazines, and more

Expatriation tax proposals analyzed.(Expatriation Tax Task Force)(Brief Article)
Newspaper article from: CPA Letter; 6/1/2002; 137 words ; The Expatriation Tax Task Force submitted to Congress...a detailed technical analysis of expatriation tax proposals. The paper discusses...intended to deal with individual expatriation to avoid tax. In addition, the paper... Read more
Citizenship and those who leave; the politics of emigration and expatriation.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News; 8/1/2007; 120 words ; 9780252074295 Citizenship and those who leave; the politics of emigration and expatriation. Ed. by Nancy L. Green and Francois Weil. U. of Illinois Press 2007 318 pages $25.00 Paperback Studies of world migrations JV6021... Read more
"Payin' one's dues": expatriation as personal experience and paradigm in the works of James Baldwin.
Magazine article from: African American Review; 3/22/1999; ; 700+ words ; ...curiously, has been neglected in Baldwin studies: the theme of expatriation.(1) It has been widely recognized that the Parisian and...the colonial oppressor. On a less metaphysical level, the expatriation of artists from America was a common occurrence. Since colonial... Read more
Carlos A. Somoza.(News and Notes)
Magazine article from: Florida Bar News; 1/1/2009; 25 words ; Carlos A. Somoza of BDO Seidman presented on the recent changes to expatriation tax law at the 2008 BDO Seidman LLP National Tax Conference in Scottsdale, Arizona. Read more
Limited options: strategic maneuverings in Hime's Harlem. (American author Chester Himes; Harlem, New York, New York)
Magazine article from: African American Review; 12/22/1994; ; 700+ words ; ...American author who in his lifetime never found a place in the American literary scene, set his novels written during French expatriation in the nostalgic milieu of a Harlem he half-created in his imagination. In fiction he was able to exercise a control over... Read more
Comments Wanted on Tax Issue.
Newspaper article from: CPA Letter; 1/1/2001; 72 words ; ...and feedback from members regarding concerns CPAs and their clients have with existing Internal Revenue Code section 877, Expatriation to Avoid Tax. E-mail a brief description of your section 877 concerns to Eileen Sherr at esherr@aicpa.org. The task force... Read more
Reclassifying class in today's Britain.
Magazine article from: Contemporary Review; 3/22/2007; ; 700+ words ; ...employed over a million workers, the collapse of the textile, ship-building and car-making industries, the bankruptcy or expatriation of factories which on their own employed almost the entire labouring population of substantial towns, have destroyed the... Read more
Florida Accounting & Business Expo. (News and Notes).
Magazine article from: Florida Bar News; 9/1/2002; 62 words ; ...at the Florida Accounting & Business Expo, sponsored by the Florida Institute of CPAs. He also presented U.S. Pre-Immigration Tax Planning and Expatriation at a recent meeting of the Southwest Florida Chapter of the FICPA in Bonita Springs. Read more
What to do about the expatriate?(wealthy tax evaders)(On The Right)(Column)
Magazine article from: National Review; 11/25/1996; ; 675 words ; ...every year? That question sends us back to the thought-library. When is expatriation commendable? We begin by acknowledging that all Americans are the fruit of expatriation. We have never cultivated harsh thoughts for those who left England or... Read more
GUATEMALA: MEXICO & UN END REFUGEE-ASSISTANCE PROGRAM AFTER LAST GROUP RETURNS TO GUATEMALA.
Newspaper article from: NotiCen: Central American & Caribbean Affairs; 8/5/1999; 378 words ; ...Refugees (UNHCR), participated in a ceremony in the village of Santo Domingo Keste, Campeche, formally ending two decades of expatriation for thousands of Guatemalans fleeing the civil war. The occasion also marked the end of assistance to the refugees channeled... Read more

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