Toothless European Citizenship / Šimon Uradnik
3.1.1 General Scholarship on Nationality Law Several approaches how to perceive the origin and acquisition of nationality may be encountered; the author nevertheless relies in his study on the systematics and knowledge developed in research by A. ManthaHollands and J. Dzankic, 172 and H. van Eijken and P. Phoa; 173 nonetheless, also on his own input. The entire matter at issue can be divided into two pathways with subsequent specific laws whereby an individual acquires nationality. First, the acquisition ex lege 174 thereby nationality is acquired predominantly, but not only, at and by birth — an individual needs not to act in any way since, for instance, the sole fact of birth is the manner how nationality is acquired. Second, the acquisition ex actu , 175 whereby an individual acquires nationality by mutual acting with an authority under the qualified procedure. Under each category of acquisition, particular iura may be subordinated, the primal objective of which is to secure the continuity of link between a state and its citizens throughout generations. 176 3.1.1.1 Acquisition ex lege The acquisition ex lege , hence, an acquisition by birth consists of two principal rules, namely, ius sanguinis — the right of blood, and ius soli — the right of soil. The principle of ius sanguinis — acquiring nationality after parents — may be traced backwards up to the Greco-Roman 172 Ashley Mantha-Hollands and Jelena Dzankic, ‘Ties that bind and unbind: charting the boundaries of European Union citizenship’ (2022) 49/9 Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 2091
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