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Legal status of persons
Concepts

Citizenship
Nationality
Naturalization
Leave to Remain
Immigration
Illegal immigration
Statelessness

Legal designations

Citizen
Native-born citizen
Naturalized citizen
Dual-citizen
Alien
Migrant worker
Refugee
Illegal immigrant
Political prisoner
Stateless person
Administrative detain

Social politics

Immigration law
Nationality law
Nationalism
Nativism (politics)
Immigration debate

In law, an alien is a person in a country who is not a citizen of that country.[1]

Contents

[edit] Categorization

Types of "alien" persons are:

  • An alien who is legally permitted to remain in a country which is foreign to him or her. On specified terms, this kind of alien may be called a legal alien of that country. This is a very broad category which includes tourists, guest workers, legal permanent residents and student visa resident aliens.
  • An alien who has temporary or permanent residence in a country (which is foreign to him/her) may be called a resident alien of that country. This is a subset of the aforementioned legal alien category.
  • An alien who is visiting a country (which is foreign to him/her) may be called a nonresident alien of that country. This is a subset of the aforementioned legal alien category.
  • An alien who is present in a country (which is foreign to him/her) unlawfully or without the country's authorization may be called an illegal alien of that country.[2] In the United States, such an alien may euphemistically call themself an "undocumented person".
  • An enemy alien is an alien who is designated as an enemy; compare to enemy combatant.

[edit] Specific jurisdictions

  • In U.S. law, an alien is "any person not a citizen or national of the United States."[3] The U.S. Government's use of alien dates back to 1798, when it was used in the Alien and Sedition Acts.[4] U.S. law makes a clear distinction between aliens and immigrants by defining immigrants as a subset of aliens.[3] Although U.S. law provides no overarching explicit definition of the term "illegal alien," the term is used in many statutes[5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13] and elsewhere (e.g., court cases, executive orders). U.S. law also uses the term "unauthorized alien."[14][15][16][17][18] U.S. immigration laws do not refer to illegal immigrants, but in common parlance the term "illegal immigrant" is often used to refer to any illegal alien.[19] Because at law, a corporation is a person, the term alien is not limited to natural humans because what are colloquially called foreign corporations are technically called alien corporations. Because corporations are creations of local state law, a foreign corporation is an out of state corporation.
  • In Latvian passports, alien is used for non-citizens (nepilsoņi): former citizens of USSR who have specific rights and privileges under Latvian law and international bilateral treaties while not possessing full Latvian citizenship.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ "alien" [1]
  2. ^ "illegal alien" [2]
  3. ^ a b 8 USC 1101 [3]
  4. ^ Alien and Sedition Acts [4]
  5. ^ 2 USC 658 [5]
  6. ^ 8 USC 1252c [6]
  7. ^ 8 USC 1330 [7]
  8. ^ 8 USC 1356 [8]
  9. ^ 8 USC 1365 [9]
  10. ^ 8 USC 1366 [10]
  11. ^ 8 USC 1621 [11]
  12. ^ 42 USC 6705 [12]
  13. ^ 49 USC 40125 [13]
  14. ^ 8 USC 1188 [14]
  15. ^ 8 USC 1255 [15]
  16. ^ 8 USC 1324 [16]
  17. ^ 8 USC 1324a [17]
  18. ^ 8 USC 1324b [18]
  19. ^ "Immigration Coverage in the Crossfire" Deborah Howell, March 2, 2008, The Washington Post

[edit] External links




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