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Italy’s 2026 Immigration Bill: Why Integration Should Matter More Than Time

Italy’s 2026 Immigration Bill: Why Integration Should Matter More Than Time

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Italy’s 2026 Immigration Bill: Why Integration Should Matter More Than Time Welcome to a new episode of Integration or ReImmigration, I’m immigration lawyer Fabio Loscerbo. Today, for my U.S. audience, I want to explain a debate now emerging in Italy that has implications far beyond Italy. A proposal linked to Italy’s 2026 immigration reform still relies, in part, on a familiar idea: that five years of legal residence can be treated as a benchmark for more stable immigration status. My argument is simple: time alone is a weak legal standard. Living in a country for five years does not automatically prove integration. It tells us duration, but not belonging. It does not show whether a person has built social ties, entered the workforce, learned the language, or respected the civic rules of the host society. That is why I argue the real reform should be different: replace a time-based model with an integration-based model. In Italy, we already have something called an Integration Agreement, and I believe this should become the central criterion. Not “How long have you been here?” but “Have you integrated?” For an American audience, think of this as shifting immigration law from a passive residency test toward a civic performance standard. And this matters in practice. It would affect residence permits, humanitarian protection, and long-term immigration policy itself. This is also where my broader framework — Integration or ReImmigration — comes in. The principle is straightforward: those who integrate should remain; where integration fails, return policies become part of the system. That, in my view, is a more coherent model than treating time alone as entitlement. And perhaps that is the broader lesson, not only for Italy, but for Western immigration law generally. Thank you for listening, and I’ll see you in the next episode of Integration or ReImmigration.
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