Ius soli e cittadinanza europea
Abstract
The European citizenship is a derived citizenship because it
requires the citizenship of a Member state and that fact increases the
responsibility of the individual states legislating on issues relating to
domestic citizenship. On one side there is therefore complete
independence of the individual Member state to determinate the conditions
for the acquisition of its citizenship but at the same time that means an
equity problem between nationals of various Member states and even a
possible substantial denial of the right to free mobility at European level,
mobility from which, indeed, the loss of original nationality or the
purchase of a new citizenship could result. These problems become then
clearly amplified by the migration flows of the last few years and by the
selected accepting criteria, finding contact points with the residence
discipline (so-called social citizenship) and with the one concerning
residence permits of permanent or long-term validity. Currently, the fact
remains that, within the European Union, the existing legislation still sees
states, albeit with different nuances, adopting the ius soli system and states
adopting the ius sanguinis one. In Italy a draft law concerning the
introduction of ius soli was submitted, whilst also providing for the
assumption of the so-called ius culturae