The paper’s aim is to underline the growing phenomenon of categorization of EU migrants despite the existence of a common EU citizenship. It addresses legal categorization deriving from EU legislation and the jurisprudence of the Court of Justice of the European Union, but also factual categorization arising from host member states’ practices. The legal categorization of EU migrants reveals a clear differential treatment between economically active and inactive EU mobile citizens. Member states’ practices very often go further than legal categorization by excluding poor mobile citizens, viewed as abusers of rights (benefit tourism) or as a potential threat to local public order or security (ill health, begging, violence). This paper also in...
The European Agenda on migration (COM (2015)240) proposes to build a coherent and comprehensive appr...
Although EU citizenship is described as destined to become the fundamental status of the nationals o...
The previous two papers in this volume identified and commented upon a turn in case law towards narr...
The paper’s aim is to underline the growing phenomenon of categorization of EU migrants despite the ...
This paper studies the distribution and legitimisation of civil, political and social entitlements t...
There are various issues which arise in the European context with respect to the boundaries of citiz...
Differences in Member States' economic development and national social protection systems can transl...
While the movement of persons is at the heart of the European construction, it has been conceptualis...
First published online: 29 July 2021The judgment delivered by the Court of Justice of the European U...
It has been argued that nation‐states confront migrant protection with a highly diverse array of mea...
This paper shall answer the following research question, “What do the Dano, Alimanoviç and Garcia-Ni...
Principally, this book comprises a conceptual analysis of the illegality of a third-country national...
Since the late 1980s there has been a diversification of European migratory flows. States, which rem...
How do states in Western Europe deal with the challenges of migration for citizenship? The legal rel...
One of the reasons why international migration is so central to the politics of many European countr...
The European Agenda on migration (COM (2015)240) proposes to build a coherent and comprehensive appr...
Although EU citizenship is described as destined to become the fundamental status of the nationals o...
The previous two papers in this volume identified and commented upon a turn in case law towards narr...
The paper’s aim is to underline the growing phenomenon of categorization of EU migrants despite the ...
This paper studies the distribution and legitimisation of civil, political and social entitlements t...
There are various issues which arise in the European context with respect to the boundaries of citiz...
Differences in Member States' economic development and national social protection systems can transl...
While the movement of persons is at the heart of the European construction, it has been conceptualis...
First published online: 29 July 2021The judgment delivered by the Court of Justice of the European U...
It has been argued that nation‐states confront migrant protection with a highly diverse array of mea...
This paper shall answer the following research question, “What do the Dano, Alimanoviç and Garcia-Ni...
Principally, this book comprises a conceptual analysis of the illegality of a third-country national...
Since the late 1980s there has been a diversification of European migratory flows. States, which rem...
How do states in Western Europe deal with the challenges of migration for citizenship? The legal rel...
One of the reasons why international migration is so central to the politics of many European countr...
The European Agenda on migration (COM (2015)240) proposes to build a coherent and comprehensive appr...
Although EU citizenship is described as destined to become the fundamental status of the nationals o...
The previous two papers in this volume identified and commented upon a turn in case law towards narr...