Yes, you are a full Irish citizen, eligible for an Irish passport, a member of the EU.
If either parent was a citizen of Ireland at the time of the birth, the newborn would automatically be a citizen of Ireland as well.
I am an Irish Citizen and wish to become a Barbados citizen
Yes. See here for details on how to take up citizenship. http://www.dfa.ie/home/index.aspx?id=267
Not that I'm aware of, although he can claim Irish dual-citizenship as his grandparents were both Irish.
You should be able to. Click on the link below for the Irish department of foreign affairs.
By law, the Irish government can recommend honorary Irish citizenship for someone who has signalled honour or rendered distinguished service to the nation. The President of Ireland can then officially grant the person honorary Irish citizenship.
There's lots of ways to get Irish citizenship. I'll list them all out:If you do not have the citizenship of any other country you get Irish citizenship automatically, if you are born in Ireland.If either of your parents already have Irish citizenship, then you are also Irish unless your parent was born abroad and their birth was not reported to the Irish authorities.If you are born in Ireland to British parents, you would be both Irish and British unless your British parents were born outside of Britain, then you would only be Irish.You can naturalize as an Irish citizen after 5 years of legal residence.If your grandparent was born in Ireland, you are entitled to become an Irish citizen.If your great grandparent was born in Ireland, you can become an Irish citizen assuming your parent's birth was registered with the Irish authorities before your birth.Irish citizenship can be passed from generation to generation abroad as long as one registers their birth before the subsequent generation is born.If you were born in Ireland prior to 2005, you became an Irish citizen even if neither of your parents were citizens.
yep :) my mom is a canadian citizen. She went to college in Canada and lived there for a few years and became a Canadian citizen. Hope I helped.
pro - Europe wide transport made easier - eligable to work in (i think) 16 countries in the EU - able to travel the EU very easily - currency the same in 16 countries con - Europe more expensive than America - will you have to give up U.S. citizinship?? - many people dislike Americans and America - global recession - language barrier in many countries if you don't know any of one language
Yes. The legalization of same-sex marriage in Ireland is imminent. Following a favorable vote in the May 22, 2015 public referendum, the Constitution of Ireland has been amended to guarantee same-sex couples the right to marry.While others must reside in Ireland for five years before becoming eligible for naturalization, the spouse of an Irish citizen is eligible after only three years. For spouses only, all or part of the residency requirement can be fulfilled by living in Northern Ireland.
Up until recently Irish citizenship laws changed due to overpopulation of illegal immigrants who were claiming citizenship in order to claim welfare, mainly from deprived nations. Before this the law allowed anyone born in Ireland to be a citizen, now this does NOT grant you citizenship. For more information: http://www.citizensinformation.ie/categories/moving-country/irish-citizenship