Citizenship, the Grip: the Descendants of Migrants Will only Have It if a Parent or a Grandfather Were Born in Italy
13 Articles
13 Articles
The Senate's "L'ok" to the decree introducing a limit to the "ius sanguinis" to block the chaos of the requests for citizenship of Italian oriundi (especially of South America)
The provision was promoted by the Prime Minister of the European country, Giorgia Meloni, and won 81 votes in favour and 37 against in the upper house. Next week it will be discussed in deputies.
On Thursday, the Italian Senate passed a bill that modifies the process of recognition to access Italian citizenship. This reform will place obstacles to access to nationality and could affect thousands of Argentines who are starting the process. Now, the initiative of the government of the premier Giorgia Meloni will pass to the Chamber of Deputies and it is expected that the final vote will be held next week. The decree, for its part, states t…
The reform, promoted by Meloni’s government, establishes new restrictions in the process of recognition of Italian nationality. What? Italy’s entry advances with the reform that restricts access to citizenship: how it affects Argentines was first published in #BorderJournalism.
The Italian Parliament took this Thursday the first step to validate a decree-law of the Government of Giorgia Meloni that limits the granting of nationality to descendants of Italians abroad. The text has been approved in the Senate, with 81 votes in favour and 37 against, and must now be validated [...] The entry Italy takes the first step to limit the nationality of descendants abroad was first published in Information Focus.
The Italian Parliament took the first step on Thursday to validate a decree-law of the Government of Giorgia Meloni that limits the granting of nationality to descendants of Italians abroad. The text has been approved in the Senate, with 81 votes in favour and 37 against, and now must also be validated in the Chamber of Deputies to complete its processing (in Italy, the decrees-law must pass through Parliament within 60 days or expire). "This re…
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