Foreign nationals granted Irish citizenship through the legal process are Naturalised Irish. They hold full legal membership of the state and all fundamental human rights protections afforded by this constitution. They are constitutionally distinguished from Native Irish in matters of land ownership, demographic composition calculations, and eligibility for certain public offices as defined by law. Their citizenship documents shall clearly indicate their citizenship category. This distinction is not a hierarchy of human worth. All persons on Irish soil retain dignity and fundamental rights. It is precision in law about what different relationships to the nation mean. For the purposes of the demographic provisions of Article 119, Naturalised Irish citizens are counted among residents of non-Irish heritage.