Effective Date Of Citizenship
Effective date. Autobiography of a yogi in hindi. The effective date of the Child Citizenship Act is February 27, 2001. Children who meet the requirements of the Act on that date automatically became U.S. Children who were 18 years of age or older on that date did not acquire U.S. Citizenship from the Child Citizenship Act of 2000. If your child continued to qualify for U.S. Citizenship under the act after the effective date, then your child became a U.S. Citizen automatically on February 27, 2001.
- Child Citizenship Act Of 2001
- Effective Date Of Citizenship/permanent Residency
- Effective Date Of Citizenship Residency
An effective date or as of date is the date upon which something is considered to take effect, which may be a past, present or future date. This may be different from the date upon which the event occurs or is recorded.[1][2]
In Reserve Fund Planning, an effective date refers to the fiscal year's first day where changes, voted on at a condo or strata corporation Annual General Meeting, take effect regardless of whether the vote took place before or after the beginning of the fiscal year. This effective date is when recommendations take place.
See also[edit]
Child Citizenship Act Of 2001
References[edit]
Effective Date Of Citizenship/permanent Residency
- ^Richard Snodgrass (1985), A taxonomy of time databases, pp. 236–246, ISBN0-89791-160-1
- ^Kenneth A. Adams (2004), A manual of style for contract drafting, ISBN978-1-59031-380-0