Various European countries are members of an
International Commission on Civil Status which provides a mutually recognized convention on the coding of entries appearing in civil status documents, with common codes and translation tables between the language of the member states. They also provide an English unofficial translation.
Italy Italy has one of the most comprehensive civil status laws in Europe; it originated in the late 19th century and was later consolidated by
Mussolini government. Every Italian municipality has a civil registrar, who, in the absence of delegates, is the mayor. This officer maintains the civil status registers, which include citizenship, births, marriage banns, marriages, and deaths. The registers were paper-based until the 2020s; subsequently, amid strong protests from professionals, they were moved to centralized electronic storage. ==Challenges==