The cautious approach of European Legislators towards the integration of non-EU third country nationals (TCNs), mirrored in the provisions of Long-Term Residence Directive 2003/109/EC, has brought about the creation of ‘spatial temporal waiting zones’. Migrants are confined in both place and time before being able to access the (as of yet, very limited) mobility rights conferred upon them by the Directive. Restricted mobility rights for TCNs can seriously impinge on the economic growth of the EU. This paper reveals three ‘faults’ of the current system. First, we show how TCNs already evade ‘temporal borders’ by moving across geographical ones to take up employment before being entitled to do so under the provisions of the Directive. Next, w...
Contains fulltext : 95372.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)In this paper ...
The enjoyment of some rights by third-country nationals in the EU is not dependent on the primary be...
: Borders have gone far beyond their traditional static function of merely demarcating nationstates....
In recent years certain categories of third-country nationals have been endowed with free-movement r...
While European Union citizenship gradually moved from a matter of employment rights toward a matter ...
This chapter surveys the scholarly debate on EU policies pertaining to the integration of third-coun...
Since the late 1980s there has been a diversification of European migratory flows. States, which rem...
This paper investigates the effectiveness of recent measures undertaken by the governments of some E...
The ability of European nation-states to control migration and regulate the entry and stay of migran...
This article scrutinizes the mobility regime of the EU by focusing on the challenges to belonging, w...
It has been argued that nation‐states confront migrant protection with a highly diverse array of mea...
Tensions exist in the way that the European Union is conceptualised. How do we reconcile the persist...
Long-term resident third-country nationals in the European Union are no longer invisible. The Commun...
Over the past 15 years, the ‘Europeanisation’ of policies dealing with the conditions of entry and r...
Research into the mobility of European Union (EU) citizens has contributed to a better understanding...
Contains fulltext : 95372.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)In this paper ...
The enjoyment of some rights by third-country nationals in the EU is not dependent on the primary be...
: Borders have gone far beyond their traditional static function of merely demarcating nationstates....
In recent years certain categories of third-country nationals have been endowed with free-movement r...
While European Union citizenship gradually moved from a matter of employment rights toward a matter ...
This chapter surveys the scholarly debate on EU policies pertaining to the integration of third-coun...
Since the late 1980s there has been a diversification of European migratory flows. States, which rem...
This paper investigates the effectiveness of recent measures undertaken by the governments of some E...
The ability of European nation-states to control migration and regulate the entry and stay of migran...
This article scrutinizes the mobility regime of the EU by focusing on the challenges to belonging, w...
It has been argued that nation‐states confront migrant protection with a highly diverse array of mea...
Tensions exist in the way that the European Union is conceptualised. How do we reconcile the persist...
Long-term resident third-country nationals in the European Union are no longer invisible. The Commun...
Over the past 15 years, the ‘Europeanisation’ of policies dealing with the conditions of entry and r...
Research into the mobility of European Union (EU) citizens has contributed to a better understanding...
Contains fulltext : 95372.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)In this paper ...
The enjoyment of some rights by third-country nationals in the EU is not dependent on the primary be...
: Borders have gone far beyond their traditional static function of merely demarcating nationstates....