<P> Citizenship in North Korea is a status given to individuals recognised as North Korean by the government of the country . It is a source of shared national identity, but can also be one of contention or conflict . </P> <P> North Korea adopted a nationality law in 1963: 15 years after being founded on September 9, 1948 . It has since been revised in 1995 and 1999 . The nationality law of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea governs who is a citizen of the DPRK, and how one may gain or lose such citizenship . It prescribes citizenship qualifications, citizen rights, and citizen protections . While containing just 16 articles, it covers most of the basic features which can be found across modern citizenship legislation in other nations . Furthermore, North Korean nationality law incorporates anyone who resided in the country since the foundation of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK). This includes varied groups due to the DPRK's annexation by Japan and the United States, occupation by the Soviet Union and final surrender to the Allies in 1945 . The law assumes that people registered in North Korea became nationals of North Korea . </P> <P> Jus sanguinis, or the "right of blood," means determining citizenship through the status of a child's parents . Any child born to two North Korean nationals becomes a North Korean citizen . However, if a child is born abroad to one North Korean national and one parent of a different nationality, the citizenship is to be determined by the parents . </P> <P> Jus soli, or the "right of the soil," is better known as birthright citizenship . This type of citizenship or nationality is awarded to citizens who are born within the jurisdiction of a given state . In North Korea, birth within the country's borders does not automatically grant a child citizenship, with the exception of a child born in North Korea with "unknown or stateless parents ." </P>

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