When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Greek nationality law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_nationality_law

    An ethnic Greek born outside of Greece may acquire Greek citizenship by naturalization if they fail to qualify for simple registration as the child of a Greek citizen. (This provision excludes Greek Cypriots , who may seek Cypriot citizenship instead.) [ citation needed ] The applicant must prove that at least one parent or grandparent was born ...

  3. Greek passport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_passport

    A Greek diplomatic passport has the same size and design as the standard one, but it features a black cover and the text ΔΙΠΛΩΜΑΤΙΚΟ ΔΙΑΒΑΤΗΡΙΟ (IPA: [ðiplomatiˈko ðʝavaˈtiri.o], "diplomatic passport") inscribed below the coat of arms. Greek passports contain 32 pages and are currently valid for up to 10 years.

  4. Naturalization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naturalization

    Naturalization (or naturalisation) is the legal act or process by which a non-national of a country acquires the nationality of that country after birth. [1] The definition of naturalization by the International Organization for Migration of the United Nations excludes citizenship that is automatically acquired (e.g. at birth) or is acquired by declaration.

  5. Greek ethnicity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_ethnicity

    For the Greeks, even today, ethnicity has greater significance than for many other peoples. [1] [2] [3] After all, during the three century long Islamic-Ottoman occupation, the Greeks managed to preserve their culture, Greek Orthodox faith, language and identity unharmed; and from 1821 onwards, they were able to re-establish their own sovereign state with an intact ethnicity.

  6. Oikos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oikos

    The oikos was the basic unit of society in most Greek city-states. For regular Attic usage within the context of families, the oikos referred to a line of descent from father to son from generation to generation. [2] Alternatively, as Aristotle used it in his Politics, the term was sometimes used to refer to everybody living in a given house.

  7. History of citizenship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_citizenship

    The Greek-style phalanx required close cohesion, since each soldier's shield protected the soldier to his left. Many thinkers link the phalanx to the development of citizenship. The Greek sense of citizenship may have arisen from military necessity, since a key military formation demanded cohesion and commitment by each particular soldier.

  8. Nicos Poulantzas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicos_Poulantzas

    Nicos Poulantzas (Greek: Νίκος Πουλαντζάς [ˈnikos pulanˈd͡zas]; 21 September 1936 – 3 October 1979) was a Greek-French Marxist political sociologist and philosopher. In the 1970s, Poulantzas was known, along with Louis Althusser , as a leading structural Marxist ; while at first a Leninist , he eventually became a proponent ...

  9. Greek diaspora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_diaspora

    The Greek diaspora is one of the oldest diasporas in the world, with an attested presence from Homeric times to the present. [3] Examples of its influence range from the role played by Greek expatriates in the emergence of the Renaissance, through liberation and nationalist movements involved in the fall of the Ottoman Empire, to commercial developments such as the commissioning of the world's ...