This rule can be also applied to people born in the Falkland Islands, a disputed territory between Argentina and the United Kingdom.
Applicants must declare loyalty to Argentina's democratic system, prove their self-sufficiency without state assistance, hold no criminal record, and fulfill other criteria set by Argentine immigration authorities.
The requisite period of residence may be subject to certain conditions or exceptions, such as completion of integration courses or marital status to Argentine citizens.
Additionally, citizens of specific countries or regions may be exempt from certain requirements or granted special considerations during the naturalization process.
[6] It is also possible not to mention Argentine citizenship, and enter and leave as a foreign national so long as travel documents do not state place of birth or residence being Argentina.
Additionally, citizenship may be stripped from individuals engaged in activities deemed harmful to the state, as determined by Argentine law.
The court refused to hear their marital dispute, denying federal jurisdiction on the grounds that married women were required to have a unified identity and share the same domicile as their husbands.
[22] It contained no specific provisions relating to the loss of citizenship,[21] but the Supreme Court ruled in eleven separate cases between 1867 and 1902 that an Argentine woman who married a foreigner lost her nationality.
[24] The Argentine Civil Code, adopted in 1869, followed Catholic canon law, establishing a husband's authority over his family and incapacitating married women.
[25] A ruling in 1902 from the Supreme Court found that the act of marriage was not responsible for either acquisition or loss of nationality for a woman, but that it could expatriate her for jurisdictional purposes in legal matters, reinforcing that a wife was required to follow her husband's authority.
[29] In 1933, the Argentine delegation to the Pan-American Union's Montevideo conference signed the Inter-American Convention on the Nationality of Women, which became effective in 1934, without legal reservations.
[32] Argentine citizens have participated in Mercosur initiatives and have benefited from agreements such as the free movement of goods, services, and people within the bloc.
Additionally, Mercosur has facilitated political dialogue and cooperation among its member states on various regional and international issues.