Many people in the Americas would probably be surprised to learn that, in much of the rest of the world, being born in a country does not by itself make you a citizen. In most of the Americas, citizenship is automatically granted on the basis of jus soli (“right of soil”): birth on the territory. Elsewhere, citizenship is more often based on jus sanguinis (“right of blood”): descent. This is the case in most of the EU.

Citizenship in an EU country is considered unusually desirable because of the mobility rights and powerful passport it confers. However, the rules concerning exactly what kind of descent confers citizenship varies widely among member states. Italy used to be considered among the easiest, requiring only that an applicant prove they had an Italian ancestor alive after March 17, 1861, when the Kingdom of Italy was founded. That changed last year, when the country passed a new law significantly tightening the requirements for citizenship, which was recently upheld by the country’s Constitutional Court. The new law brings requirements more in line with norm among EU member states:

Now, only individuals with at least one parent or grandparent born in Italy will automatically qualify for citizenship by descent. The amended law does not affect the 60,000 applications currently pending review. Additionally, dual nationals risk losing their Italian citizenship if they “don’t engage” by paying taxes, voting or renewing their passports.

I personally know people who have acquired EU citizenship this way. This pathway also exists for a number of other EU countries with loose definitions of what qualifies for citizenship by descent, such as Croatia, Latvia, Hungary, and Ireland. I myself looked into getting EU citizenship many years back. Unfortunately for me, my ancestry runs through the Netherlands, one of the strictest countries in the EU when it comes to citizenship.