“…In the past, women who marry foreigners lost their original nationality and adopted the nationality of their husbands. This so-called ‘marriage rule’ can be found in the ruling of an Argentinian Court in 1897 stipulating that ‘When a woman marries a foreigner, she knows that, by her marriage, she becomes a foreigner, and she consents implicitly in the renunciation of her nationality and the acquisition of her husband’s’ (emphasis added) (Augustine-Adams, 2002: 19). The deprivation of her original nationality is a consequence for her ‘defection’ from her origin nation (Epstein, 1978: 106), while adopting the husband’s nationality is upheld on the ‘principle of family unity,’ which is mainly to ensure patrilineal genealogy, regarded as the foundation of national belonging (De Hart, 2006a, 2006b).…”