Template:Ship call sign/doc and Iseul v. Ministry of State: Difference between pages

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{{Documentation subpage}}
{{Italic title}}
This template is used to generate a box that shows the [[Call sign#Ships and boats|International radio call sign]] of a ship.
{{Stub}}


== Usage ==
'''Iseul v. Ministry of State''' (1980) was a landmark case before the [[Criminal_justice_system_of_Urcea#Hierarchy_of_courts|Archducal Court]] of [[Urcea]] in which it was ruled that Urcea's traditional, uncodified rule of citizenship-upon-conception applied to foreign nationals. The case had the practical effect of codifying the premise of citizenship-upon-conception and struck down previous prohibitions on accepting citizenship petitions from individually allegedly conceived in [[Urcea]]. The decision involved [[Iseul Oh]], a national of [[Metzetta]], who conclusively proved he was conceived in Urcea while his parents were on honeymoon in 1946. The [[Ministry of State (Urcea)|Ministry of State]] nonetheless denied his request for citizenship, claiming that the conception rule only related to the civil rights of unborn persons in Urcea and did not, on its own, confer Urcean citizenship and nationality. Following lower court decisions which ruled in favor of the Ministry, the Archducal Court ruled unanimously in favor of Iseul Oh, granting him citizenship and establishing a precedent which enhanced the traditional understanding of citizenship-upon-conception.
For example, {{tlx|Ship call sign|A|B|C|D|ship name {{=}} USS ''Ship Name'' (AT-123)}} will give you:
{{Ship call sign|A|B|C|D|ship name = USS ''Ship Name'' (AT-123)}}


{{clear}}
[[Category: Laws of Urcea]]
 
===TemplateData===
{{TemplateDataHeader}}
<templatedata>
{
    "description": "Ship characteristics, to be used with {{Infobox ship begin}}",
    "params": {
        "1": {
            "label": "1",
            "description": "The first letter",
            "default": "ERROR",
            "example": "A",
            "type": "string",
            "required": true
        },
        "2": {
            "label": "2",
            "description": "The second letter",
            "default": "ERROR",
            "example": "B",
            "type": "string",
            "required": true
        },
        "3": {
            "label": "3",
            "description": "The third letter",
            "default": "ERROR",
            "example": "C",
            "type": "string",
            "required": true
        },
        "4": {
            "label": "4",
            "description": "The fourth letter",
            "default": "ERROR",
            "example": "D",
            "type": "string",
            "required": true
        },
        "ship name": {
            "label": "Ship name",
            "description": "The name of the ship in question.",
            "default": "PAGENAME",
            "type": "string",
            "required": false
        },
        "reference": {
            "label": "Reference",
            "description": "A citation for the information",
            "type": "string",
            "required": false
        }
    }
}
</templatedata>
<includeonly>{{Sandbox other||
<!-- Categories below this line, please; interwikis at Wikidata -->
[[Category:Ship templates]]
}}</includeonly>

Revision as of 19:57, 12 April 2022

Iseul v. Ministry of State (1980) was a landmark case before the Archducal Court of Urcea in which it was ruled that Urcea's traditional, uncodified rule of citizenship-upon-conception applied to foreign nationals. The case had the practical effect of codifying the premise of citizenship-upon-conception and struck down previous prohibitions on accepting citizenship petitions from individually allegedly conceived in Urcea. The decision involved Iseul Oh, a national of Metzetta, who conclusively proved he was conceived in Urcea while his parents were on honeymoon in 1946. The Ministry of State nonetheless denied his request for citizenship, claiming that the conception rule only related to the civil rights of unborn persons in Urcea and did not, on its own, confer Urcean citizenship and nationality. Following lower court decisions which ruled in favor of the Ministry, the Archducal Court ruled unanimously in favor of Iseul Oh, granting him citizenship and establishing a precedent which enhanced the traditional understanding of citizenship-upon-conception.