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This type of titles (professional, eg Doctor) are a different category from academic titles, eg Dr.rsa707 wrote:I think it is possible. Usually people avoid to use Dr for phd but you can. Here is the wording what says about it.
Professional titles
Professional titles and forms of address such as Doctor, Judge, Ministers of Religion, Professor, MP, MEP, and QC may on request be entered as an observation in the passport.
Lords Hansard of 12th December 2005Lord Selsdon: Noble Lords will know that one in 12 of the British population was born overseas. Of that number—in total around 4.9 million or 8.3 per cent—a Home Office document states, perhaps incorrectly, that 53 per cent are white, which assumes that 47 per cent are of other ethnic origins. This includes Bangladeshi, Chinese, Pakistani and Indian. Those noble Lords who understand something of the sub-continents will know that confusion over names can be very real indeed. Therefore the purpose of my amendment is simply to suggest that after "full name", we should insert a form of words that states in effect that the name written in the passport should prevail.
The Identity Cards Act was later repealed by the Coalition, but the quotes above show the attention paid to the detail of what constituted a name and titles.Lord Selsdon: Finally, I refer back to Gaius Julius Caesar, who had two other names: Octavius, which meant he was the eighth in line—I am only the third or the fourth, I cannot remember which—and Augustus, which meant "holy" or "chosen". Since this is such an august moment, the Minister will appreciate that it would be helpful if there were some definition of what each name should be called, whether or not it is on the identity card. I still prefer the concept of Christian name, middle name and surname.
Simon, whatever you choose to read in the privacy of your own home (or perhaps on the Tube on your own Kindle) is ofcourse your business.secret.simon wrote:...
PS: Please excuse my somewhat unconventional reading habits.
+1 noajthannoajthan wrote:Simon, whatever you choose to read in the privacy of your own home (or perhaps on the Tube on your own Kindle) is ofcourse your business.secret.simon wrote:...
PS: Please excuse my somewhat unconventional reading habits.
But it is usually most illuminating or entertaining when you do choose to share.
those with a phd can use Dr. title in their passport. I think it goes to the observation on the passport as highlighted here.rsa707 wrote:I think it is possible. Usually people avoid to use Dr for phd but you can. Here is the wording what says about it.
I am totally flattered to be considered a typical PhD supervisor, especially given that the OP seems to be a Dr himself (though as the Nobel Prize winner overheard his maid say, he is not the kind of doctor who would do you any good). I did my Masters part-time while doing two jobs on my HSMP based immigration journey and funnily enough, the Masters course was way less stressful than the visa applications. I am exploring applying for a PhD, though funding seems to be the main issue facing me.tier1o wrote:Interesting debate. Thanks for the replies particularly Simonperhaps simon acting as typical phd supervisor, giving you enough pointers but still leave you confused.
Usually with funded PhDs, you are restricted to a specific subject but you have the luxury to select your own topic with self-funding. Anyway, try exploring jobs.ac.uk or findaphd.com, I see 20+ funded offers with stipend every day. Good luck btw!secret.simon wrote: I am exploring applying for a PhD, though funding seems to be the main issue facing me.
If you read further, you will see UK is not any different. I am convinced that IPS allow Dr titles for PhDs.secret.simon wrote: @Tier1O, the discussion on the other forum (thanks for the link) seems to suggest that the change is on a non-UK EU passport. As the discussion also states, there are cultural differences at play in that continental Europe takes academic titles far more seriously.
The last paragraph in the original document you linked is quite categorical...tier1o wrote:If you read further, you will see UK is not any different. I am convinced that IPS allow Dr titles for PhDs.
Academic and professional qualifications
Other than members of the legal profession appointed Queen's Counsel and engineers who hold the qualification "Eur Ing" (European Engineer), requests for professional and academic qualifications to be recorded in a passport should be refused.
Thank you Simon, this is exactly what the last para refers to. You have nailed it.secret.simon wrote: John Doe QC is acceptable, but not John Doe, MA (Oxon) or John Doe, B. Eng, FRS.
Not sure, how this link is relevant to the discussion?secret.simon wrote: Also see the second last page of Observations in Passports.