SINGAPORE, February 15, 2026 /24-7PressRelease/ -- A new comparative analysis published by CivicLearn, a citizenship test preparation platform operating across 15+ countries since 2005, reveals that the world's citizenship tests fall into five distinct philosophical models — each reflecting fundamentally different ideas about national identity and belonging.
The research, titled "The DNA of a Citizen," examines citizenship testing frameworks across more than thirty countries and identifies a striking pattern: population size and cultural vulnerability predict test difficulty far more reliably than wealth, education levels, or political ideology.
Denmark, with 5.9 million people and a failure rate above 50%, requires mastery of a 250-page syllabus including current events questions that cannot be prepared for in advance. The United States, with 330 million people, publishes all 128 possible questions and has a pass rate exceeding 90%. New Zealand administers no test at all.
The five models identified in the research are:
The Fortresses (Denmark, UK, France) — citizenship as cultural mastery
The Memorizers (Germany, USA, Spain) — citizenship as transparent contract
The Village Elders (Switzerland, Romania, Luxembourg) — citizenship as social audition
The Functionalists (Netherlands, Australia, Slovenia) — citizenship as system literacy
The Outliers (New Zealand, Singapore, Sweden) — citizenship as lived commitment
Among the findings: Switzerland remains the only country where municipal neighbors can vote on citizenship applications, with candidates reportedly questioned about local cheese purchasing habits and attitudes toward hiking. France introduced its first compulsory civics examination in 2026, marking a shift toward the "Fortress" model. Sweden will introduce its first mandatory civics test in August 2026, ending decades as the only major Western nation with zero testing requirements.
"Every citizenship test tells a story — not about the applicant, but about the nation itself," the report states. "The difficulty of a citizenship test is never really about the applicant's intelligence. It is a voltmeter for the nation's anxiety."
The full analysis, including country-by-country data tables and a language requirement matrix, is available at: https://civiclearn.com/insights/dna-of-a-citizen
An accompanying interactive quiz featuring 15 real questions from eight countries' official exams is available at: https://civiclearn.com/insights/world-citizenship-quiz
CivicLearn (civiclearn.com) has developed citizenship and civic test preparation programs since 2005. The platform serves over 11,000 users across Denmark, Luxembourg, France, Switzerland, Romania, Canada, the UK, Australia, and other countries. Its editorial arm, CivicLearn Insights, publishes research and analysis on citizenship policy worldwide.
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