About Us

Transatlantic expertise, at your service

EuropeRoots is a service of Corvin Strategies, a boutique international consulting firm specializing in transatlantic advisory — guiding leaders, businesses, and institutions toward success in a rapidly changing world.

Our background

Corvin Strategies operates at the intersection of Central European knowledge and U.S. strategic expertise. Our work spans market entry, government affairs, geopolitical strategy, and citizenship advisory — always guided by the principles of clarity, discretion, and results.

EuropeRoots was built out of our citizenship and immigration practice, focusing specifically on Americans with Hungarian ancestry seeking to reclaim their heritage through citizenship by descent. We handle the entire process — from eligibility assessment and archive research to application preparation and submission — so our clients can focus on planning their European future.

Our team

Dr. Magor Ernyei

Chief Executive Officer, Corvin Strategies

A lawyer and international relations specialist with extensive diplomatic experience, including service as Deputy Chief of Mission at Hungary's Washington embassy. Dr. Ernyei brings firsthand insight into U.S.–Hungarian institutional relations and the legal frameworks governing Hungarian citizenship.

Dr. Balázs Schultz

Executive Director, Corvin Strategies

A lawyer specializing in international strategy, Dr. Schultz leads the development of Corvin Strategies' transatlantic business and political networks. He oversees the EuropeRoots practice, ensuring each client receives expert, individually tailored guidance through the citizenship process.

Why EuropeRoots

Most citizenship consultants treat applications as paperwork exercises. We approach each case as a strategic advisory matter — understanding your family history, identifying the strongest documentation path, and managing every detail with the care it deserves. Our background in law and diplomacy means we understand how these processes actually work, not just what the forms say.