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Visitors to Argentina must obtain a visa from one of the Argentine diplomatic missions unless they are citizens of one of the visa-exempt countries. [1]Visitors must hold a passport (or identity card if Mercosur or associated) [2] valid for the period of intended stay, [3] while Argentine citizens can enter with a valid or expired passport or identity card.
Visa requirements for holders of normal passports not travelling as journalists: Argentina is a full member of Mercosur.As such, its citizens enjoy unlimited access to any of the other full members (Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay) and associated members (Bolivia, Chile, Peru, Colombia, Ecuador) with the right to residence and work, with no requirement other than nationality.
Family reunification laws try to balance the right of a family to live together with the country's right to control immigration. How they balance and which members of the family can be reunited differ largely by country. A subcategory of family reunification is marriage migration in which one spouse immigrates to the country of the other spouse.
The Familienzusammenführung visa was created to allow family members (primarily children and spouses) of foreigners already living in Germany. [1] to reside together as a family unit. To be eligible for a German Family Reunification Visa, the applicant already living in Germany has to be a legal resident of the country.
The family reunification program for Ecuadoreans mirrors similar initiatives already available to certain nationals of Cuba, Haiti, Colombia, El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras.
Argentina does not require a visa for Russian citizens to enter the country as tourists and it also allows the parents of children born on Argentinian soil to receive residency, and, later, a passport. This opportunity has led to approximately 10,500 Russians travelling to Argentina to give birth in 2022. [40]
As of 11 January 2022, Argentine citizens had visa-free or visa on arrival access to 170 countries and territories, ranking the Argentine passport 19th in terms of travel freedom. The Argentine passport is the 2nd most powerful passport in Latin America after the Chilean passport and is the 4th most powerful overall in the Americas , according ...
The continuous two-year residency requirement means that applicants need to make Argentina their home. However, since applicants enjoy the same civil rights as Argentines, including the right to travel, they may leave the country. For historical reasons, federal courts are still reluctant to recognize the rights of "irregular" immigrants.