
Revised September 2007
Public Law 107-273 recently amended section 322(a) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1433(a)), making available the facilitated naturalization procedure for children of American citizens abroad who do not meet the residence requirements for transmitting citizenship to those minors whose citizen-parent is no longer living. If the citizen-parent is deceased, an application for naturalization can now be made by a citizen-grandparent or a citizen-legal guardian. Previously, death of the citizen-parent excluded his/her children from easy naturalization.
It is anticipated that in most cases the oath is administered and the Certificate of Citizenship is issued during the pre-scheduled appointment at the District Office. Once the Certificate is in hand, the child should obtain a US passport (going through a local US Passport Office) before leaving the US. There is no longer a fine levied for leaving the US without a valid passport, so if need be, a passport can be supsequently obtained in your normal country of residence.
EOFP/Adjudicatons Branch
USCIS Headquarters
425 I Street NW
Room 3214
Washington DC 20536 USA
Tel: +1 (202) 307-3587 Fax: +1 (202) 514-8661
or 1 800 870 3676 (toll free for forms)
or 1 800 375 5283 (toll free, general info)
or www.uscis.gov/n-600k
When requesting application packets, parents should note that they wish to obtain Certificates of Citizenship under Section 322 of the INA for their children abroad. They should state how many children are to be naturalized and their ages along with the parents' full address and phone number abroad. If the child/children are adopted, please mention that on the request. ACA recommends that parents ask at this point for advice on which USCIS District office to apply to. There is NO obligation to have a "nexus" (particular connection) with a location in order to apply there.
The USCIS has no previous history of dealing with Americans abroad, and granting naturalizations under Section 322 for children who do not reside in the US is a brand new concept for them. So far, USCIS has not been very successful in changing its mind-set to carry out Section 322 in a way which will serve Americans abroad and fulfill Congressional intent.
The USCIS is a decentralized agency. Its fifty-some District Offices operate separately from one another. The level of ability to appropriately handle a Section 322 application varies greatly from one District Office to another, and each District Office seems to work independently in terms of processing applications and communicating with applicants abroad.
Three "wires" which have been sent from USCIS Headquarters to all District Offices regarding Section 322 are of particular interest to those applying: on July 7, 1995 (for applications of offspring of Americans abroad), on December 22, 1995 (for applications of adopted children), and on July 3, 1997 (regarding fingerprinting). These "wires" are Headquarters' directions to the District Offices on how to process the applications.
Which District Offices have the best/worst track records? In general, the further north and the further inland in the US the District Office, the better things go. As mentioned above, it is recommended to ask at the time one requests the application packet at which District Offices it is currently recommended to apply. A list of USCIS District Offices and their addresses is included with these materials. Whichever District Office is selected, it is important the application "explains" itself to the USCIS personnel who open the mail and initially review it. See the last item below in Section IV on Filing the Application.
Please address queries and comments to:
American Citizens Abroad
5 rue Liotard
1202 Geneva
Switzerland
phone/fax: +41 22 3400233
e-mail: 