The Ireland Act 1949 is a British Act of Parliament which was intended to deal with the consequences of the then recently passed Republic of Ireland Act 1948 as passed by the Irish parliament (Oireachtas). The act is still largely in force, but has been amended.
The act also changed the status of Northern Ireland within the United Kingdom so as to reassure the unionist majority, giving a guarantee that it shall remain part of the United Kingdom so long as a majority of its citizens so desire. This was the first such legal guarantee given to the region.
The act also created some stir in the Republic of Ireland, as its Northern Ireland provisions gave that region a status which it previously did not have. The Irish parliament called for a Protest Against Partition as a result. This was the last public protest against partition by the Irish parliament.
In general, a person born in what was Southern Ireland while it was part of the United Kingdom before 6 December 1922 was not granted Citizenship of the UK & Colonies by the British Nationality Act 1948 unless such a person had a UK & Colonies born father (based on 1949 frontiers).
In order to acquire Citizenship of the UK and Colonies such persons were expected to reside in the United Kingdom or a Crown Colony and acquire UK citizenship by registration or declaration.
Section 5 of the Ireland Act provided for acquisition of UK citizenship upon some British subjects who had left what became the Republic of Ireland before it ceased to be part of the United Kingdom. Such persons generally became British citizens on 1 January 1983. See History of British nationality law
Persons not qualifying for this concession were nevertheless able to reclaim their British subject status under section 2 of the 1948 Act. This was later re-enacted as section 31 of the British Nationality Act 1981 and remains in effect as of 2006.
Acts of the Parliament of the United Kingdom | Constitutional laws of the United Kingdom | Constitutional laws of Northern Ireland | Immigration to the United Kingdom | 1949 in law | Unionism
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