I have a question regarding British Citizen otherwise than by descent.
I realise that for any child born outside of the UK to UK citizens, they most likely become British citizens by decent. Except for some special circumstances. Therefore, that child will be unable to pass on their citizenship.
Unless, they are adopted, naturalised or have the birth registered. It states it like this on several website, probably taken from statute I guess:
You can be a British Citizen otherwise than by descent by:
Birth;
Registration;
Naturalisation;
Adoption.
My question is, how do I know if a birth has been registered? Is it just a standard birth certificate? Or is it a separate citizenship document?
A bit of context - the birth was abroad (non qualifying colony, dominion or other) in 1948 and the birth certificate or document I have was registered in the UK in 1956. Is that document what is required to meet the 'registration' criteria and therefore make the child British Citizen otherwise than by decent, as opposed to British Citizen by decent? Or is there some other document required to prove otherwise.
Thank you in advance!
