News and data on Americans abroad, in your inbox weekly. Subscribe.

News and data on Americans abroad, in your inbox weekly. Subscribe.

US Citizenship Renunciations Hit 1,462 in Q1 2026

News and data on Americans abroad, delivered to your inbox weekly. Subscribe.

A picture of a Social Security card representing Social Security abroad payments to beneficiaries living outside the United States.

711,778 Received Social Security Abroad, SSA Report Says

Social Security abroad has become an $8.39 billion annual line in the federal record of Americans living beyond the United States. The Social Security Administration counted 711,778 Old-Age, Survivors and Disability Insurance beneficiaries in foreign countries in December 2024, including 463,480 retired workers. OASDI is the formal program behind Social Security retirement, survivor and disability benefits. The agency reported $682.8 million in monthly payments to foreign countries that month. Retired

Read More »
People wait in line outside Argentina's Registro Nacional de las Personas office in Buenos Aires, where foreign residents process paperwork affected by the Argentina naturalization rules

Argentina Naturalization Rules Require 2 Unbroken Years

Argentina naturalization rules changed in 2025, and the toughest new condition only shows itself when an applicant leaves the country. One trip abroad can reset the clock to zero. President Javier Milei’s government rewrote the path to an Argentine passport by decree. Most of the changes make it harder. What the residency clock now requires The core change rewrote how Argentina counts the years toward citizenship. Decree 366/2025, published in

Read More »
The Swedish Parliament building in Stockholm behind a waving Swedish flag, where lawmakers passed Sweden's good behavior law

Sweden’s Good Behavior Law Reaches Americans on Work and Family Permits

Sweden’s good behavior law, passed by parliament June 15, lets the Swedish Migration Agency revoke residence permits for conduct that isn’t criminal, and it reaches permits already granted. That’s a first since 2005. The change takes effect July 13, and it lands on Americans the same way it lands on every other non-EU migrant: through their work, family and study permits. The conduct the law now counts The law revives

Read More »

Stay Informed with AER

Join our mailing list to receive the latest insights on migration research, policy updates, and global mobility trends—directly to your inbox.

No spam, just sharp, timely content from the world of emigration studies.

By subscribing, you consent to receive emails from the American Emigration Review (AER), including news updates, research highlights, and curated content related to global migration. We are committed to protecting your personal information—your email will never be shared, sold, or used for purposes beyond communication from AER. You can unsubscribe at any time using the link provided in every email.