Landed immigrant status in Themiclesia

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Landed immigrant status in Themiclesia gives the holder an indefininte right to enter, live, and work in Themiclesia. To become a landed immigrant, the alien needs to obtain an Immigrant Visa from the Foreign Office and a Certificate of Landing from the Border Administration. After obtaining these two documents the alien is legally considered a landed immigrant and is eligible for the Landed Immigrant Identification, an identity document for landed immigrants.

The landed immigrant has effectively the same rights and duties as Themiclesian citizens except the right to vote and stand for office: they are eligible for the National Pension Plan and all social and health benefits and are also required to make contribute to such plans as if they were citizens.

History

Immigration prior to 1881

Prior to 1868, Themiclesia had few border controls, and foreigners may generally enter and live in Themiclesia indefinitely without restrictions on where and for whom they work and live. In the context of the early 19th century, there were barely any rights proper to citizens in the modern sense. Protections from punishment without trial and unjust seizures applied to foreigners as much as Themiclesians, and the right to sue was explicitly provided for foreigners as early as 1691. The political rights—to vote, stand for election, hold civil offices, serve on juries—were regulated at a local level, and most Themiclesian people did not enjoy these rights. Foreigners therefore were on equal footing with most Themiclesians until the early 1900s, when political rights expanded with a more modern sense of citizenship.

Economically, foreigners were not allowed to own land or to inherit a Themiclesian person's property, but the disability to own land and to inherit was overcome routinely by an act of Parliament.

On Jan. 9, 1868, due to the fear of spies from Camia, Themiclesia enacted its first semi-modern nationality law, the Debarrment of Aliens Act, creating the legal categories of "subjects" and "aliens". Aliens under this law were banned from entering Themiclesia without explicit permission from the government, and those who entered after Jan. 10, 1868 were subject to deportation if discovered. Aliens who obtained permission to enter and live in Themiclesia were termed "denizens" (borrowed from Tyrannian law), while those who did not obtain permission were still "aliens". Most denizens were businessmen who required frequent access to Themiclesia, rather than immigrants in the modern sense. Foreigners whose intended stay in Themiclesia was inherently limited, e.g. diplomats, were separately regulated, though this was not a common situation.

In 1871, the Debarrment of Aliens Act was abolished, and once again foreigners could enter, live, and work in Themiclesia without any permission, though the same restrictions on foreigners' economic rights were still present. Children born in Themiclesia to alien parents retroactively became natural subjects in 1872.

Landing immigrants

In the 1880s, the Themiclsian government began a decades-long effort to colonize the great interior that was deemed wild, though nomadic societies are now understood to have been firmly established there culturally and economically. The government offered free or deeply discounted passage, land, and materials to attract settlers. To ensure orderly settlement after their arrival, fraud apparently being common, immigrants were required to obtain a visa from a Themiclesian consulate, register at the port of arrival, make payment (if required), and take ownership of their plots of land. These controls were deemed necessary to prevent communicable diseases and the arrival of "unproductive persons". After the immigrant signed for the government subsidy, the Certificate of Landing was granted, and the alien became a landed immigrant (既內者) on the Immigrant Registry.

It should be noted that during the 1880s there was no legal requirement for aliens to obtain permission to live in Themiclesia. The procedure of landing immigrants was only relevant to those who wished to claim the government subsidy for settlement of the interior. Immigrants who intended to live elsewhere could simply arrive and start working in Themiclesia, until they wished to buy land, when denization would be requisite.

In 1895, the Debarrment of Aliens Act was revived due to a widespread (but not universal) belief that foreigners en route to the interior were somehow responsible for the Cholera epidemic that ravaged through Kien-k'ang in 1894 and killed at least 10,000 people. As an exception to the Debarrment of Aliens Act, in 1897 the Visitor Act allowed the government to grant various types of visas for visitors like academic faculty, students, clergymen, tourists, and businessmen, who would previously have needed denization to enter Themiclesia while the Debarrment of Aliens Act was in force. To obtain these visas, it was generally necessary to obtain an invitation from a relevant authority in Themiclesia.

The policy of interior settlement was suspended in 1907 due to faltering government finances caused by an economic depression. However, Themiclesian consulates still issued immigrant visas for settlers on the understanding that the government will not give them benefits for immigration. In 1908, the Landing Immigrants Act passed Parliament, to establish higher standards of mental and physical soundness, as well as some degree of financial wherewithal or professional skill.

See also