公民身份是一個(gè)人的地位,根據(jù)風(fēng)俗或法律承認(rèn)作為一個(gè)主權(quán)國(guó)家的法律成員或?qū)儆谝粋€(gè)國(guó)家。一個(gè)人可以有多個(gè)公民身份。沒(méi)有任何州公民身份的人被稱為無(wú)國(guó)籍,而居住在州邊界上,其領(lǐng)土地位不確定的人被稱為邊界登陸者國(guó)籍在英語(yǔ)[2]中經(jīng)常被用作公民權(quán)的同義詞——尤其是在國(guó)際法中——盡管這個(gè)術(shù)語(yǔ)有時(shí)被理解為表示一個(gè)人屬于一個(gè)國(guó)家(一個(gè)大的民族群體)。[3]在一些國(guó)家,例如美國(guó)、英國(guó),國(guó)籍和國(guó)籍可以有不同的含義(更多信息,請(qǐng)參見(jiàn)國(guó)籍和國(guó)籍)。
Citizenship is the status of a person recognized under the custom or law as being a legal member of a sovereign state or belonging to a nation.A person may have multiple citizenships. A person who does not have citizenship of any state is said to be stateless, while one who lives on state borders whose territorial status is uncertain is a border-lander.[1]Nationality is often used as a synonym for citizenship in English[2] – notably in international law – although the term is sometimes understood as denoting a person's membership of a nation (a large ethnic group).[3] In some countries, e.g. the United States, the United Kingdom, nationality and citizenship can have different meanings (for more information, see Nationality versus citizenship).
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