Our goals and services

Our goal is to provide academics, governments, international organisations and NGOs with information for research and evidence-based evaluation of public policies.

We do not offer information or counselling to individuals interested in acquiring the citizenship of a particular country and we do not encourage experts in our network to answer such requests.

Testimonials

The EUDO CITZENSHIP Web site should be the first place policymakers, researchers, and journalists with questions about citizenship and nationality laws visit.

Demetrios G. Papademetriou, President, Migration Policy Institute

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The EUDO CITIZENSHIP website is unique in combining extensive and up to date data on citizenship in the EU, intelligent analysis of all legal and political aspects of citizenship and breaking news on the subject. At last, the issue of trans-European citizenship has truly come alive for the benefit of us all.

Kalypso Nicolaïdis, University of Oxford, member of the EU reflection group on the Future of Europe

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New Polish nationality law under constitutional review
Tuesday, 17 January 2012 08:50

By our EUDO CITIZENSHIP expert Dorota Pudzianowska

On 18 January 2012, the Polish Constitutional Tribunal will consider the new Polish nationality law (case no. Kp 5/09) at a public hearing. The Act of Parliament was referred to the Constitutional Tribunal in the ex ante constitutional review procedure by the President of Poland on 27 April 2007. The Act has not been promulgated awaiting the judgment of the Constitutional Tribunal. It provides that Voivods be authorized to 'acknowledge the Polish nationality' of specific categories of foreigners. In the motion, it was argued that the new power of the Voivods amounts to a power of granting citizenship (in the special 'acknowledgment procedure') and violates the Constitution in that it strips the President of its prerogative of exclusivity in granting Polish nationality. Both Sejm and Prosecutor General presented official positions according to which the law does not violate the Constitution. If the Tribunal finds the law in accordance with the Constitution, the President will be obligated to sign the statute and order its promulgation. Thereafter, Polish nationality law will provide for a discretionary grant of nationality by the President and administrative grant of nationality by Voivods.