Citizenship Is Not Absolute: Integration, Accountability, and Revocation

Welcome to a new episode of the podcast “Integration or ReImmigration.”
My name is Fabio Loscerbo, and I am an Italian attorney.

Today I want to speak directly to a UK audience about a principle that is becoming increasingly relevant across Western democracies: citizenship is not an absolute or untouchable status.

For many years, public debate has treated citizenship as a final destination. Once granted, it was assumed to be permanent, regardless of how it had been obtained. Time itself was seen as enough to transform even serious irregularities into settled rights. This approach may appear inclusive, but in reality it weakens the rule of law and empties integration of its legal meaning.

A recent decision at the highest level of Italian administrative law has reaffirmed a very clear principle: when citizenship is obtained through false documents or deception, the State retains the power to revoke it, even many years later. There can be no legitimate expectation where the benefit was acquired through fraud. Time does not cure illegality.

This is not a marginal or technical issue. It goes to the heart of how a democratic State defines membership. Citizenship is not a reward automatically produced by residence or by the passage of time. It is a serious legal status, built on honesty, loyalty, and respect for the legal order from the very beginning.

When citizenship is lawfully acquired, it is strong and fully protected. But when it rests on false premises, it lacks any solid foundation. In those circumstances, revocation is not arbitrary power; it is the restoration of legality.

This brings us directly to the paradigm Integration or ReImmigration. Integration is not a narrative or a moral posture. It is a legal and social process based on responsibility, compliance with the rules, and genuine adherence to the institutions and values of the host country. When these elements are absent, integration fails.

Revoking citizenship in such cases is not an ideological act. It is the State reaffirming a basic truth: membership of the national community cannot be built on a legal falsehood. Rights obtained through deception undermine the very idea of citizenship before it even begins.

There is another point that deserves particular attention in the UK context. ReImmigration is not an extreme or exceptional measure; it is an ordinary function of the State. When integration does not occur, when legal conditions collapse, and when the bond with the legal order exists only on paper, the State must retain the capacity to act. Without embarrassment and without denial.

A system that never revokes is a system that does not truly govern. And a system that does not govern does not integrate. It accumulates tension, erodes public trust, and weakens social cohesion. By contrast, a State that verifies, corrects, and—when necessary—revokes, is a credible State. And credibility is the foundation of real integration.

Citizenship therefore returns to its original meaning in public law: a demanding bond, not an inviolable shield. A bond grounded in truthful premises and continuous respect for the rules.

Integration or ReImmigration is not a provocation. It is a framework for legal seriousness and democratic stability.
Either integration is real, lawful, and responsibility-based, or the State must have the courage to say no and restore the legal order, including through revocation and return.

Thank you for listening.
Until the next episode.

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