Unless you are an Australian citizen, or are from New Zealand, then of course you need a visa. Just because you sent us here 200 years ago doens't give you special privileges. You will be subject to the same rules as everyone else.
Well goodness, us americans need a visa to visit or especially to move to anyplace in the world. Why shouldn't others be required to do the same. Besides the point, the USA is pretty much the only nation in the world that will let just about anybody in with hardly any trouble at all.
Wouldn't an american be required to have a visa to visit or live in Australia?
Yes
No, both countries are included in the visa waiver program.
Yes - many thousands. Some are dual nationals incuding Australian citizens.
A British passport holder doesn't necessarily have the right to live and work in the UK.
Yes, because both Sweden and Britain are in the EU. As a British passport holder you are also an EU citizen, which gives you the legal right to live and work in any other EU country.
Check with the British Embassy in Canberra.
I live in the USA with a Green Card but am a citizen of the UK and a UK Passport holder. I am thus to the USA/US Immigration a foreign passport holder.
Call the responsible authorities and ask. If you are in countries other than the UK, contact the nearest British High Commission.AnswerIt depends on individual circumstances. Ancestry is unlikely to be a decisive factor if you are substantially Zimbabwean. You may have to live in the UK for a few years first then apply to become a British Nationalised Citizen.
I live in the USA with a Green Card but am a citizen of the UK and a UK Passport holder. I am thus to the USA/US Immigration a foreign passport holder.
Any EC country
NO you can not live or even travel to spain.
Of the two British colonies, Canada is the best British colony to live compared to Australia.
whichever country you have a passport for.
No problem If you are a NZlander you can enter Australia with a NZ passport without a visa and can live and work here indefinitely. as my wife has done for the last 40 years.
Yes, easier if you live mostly in Britain though.