Who’s A Citizen Now? Things Are Changing.
Ramblings of an Old fart. - by Craig Warren
Episode notes
Historically, most of the world follows one of two legal principles:
- Jus Soli (Right of Soil): You are a citizen because you were born on the land. (Common in the Americas).
- Jus Sanguinis (Right of Blood): You are a citizen because your parents are. (Common in Europe and Asia).
What’s changing in 2026: The "unrestricted" versions of these are disappearing.
- In Europe: Almost no country offers unconditional birthright citizenship anymore. France, Germany, and the UK all now require parents to have lived there for several years before a child is born to get automatic citizenship.
- Ireland was the last holdout in Europe; they ended unconditional birthright citizenship in 2005.
- New Zealand and Australia also ended it in the 1980s and 2000s, moving to "conditional" systems where at least ...