This article presents an analysis of the multiple purposes of citizenship regimes in 36 states in Europe. Previous studies on this topic suffer from two methodological deficits that lead to an incomplete perspective on how states regulate citizenship status: they emphasise the importance of static national membership models and focus nearly exclusively on the access to citizenship for immigrants. To overcome these deficits, we develop a citizenship regime typology based on functional components of citizenship laws, focusing on acquisition as well as loss, inside as well as outside the territory of a state. We find that citizenship regimes in Europe configure along two dimensions that can be associated with territorial and ethnocultural incl...
Increasing mobility to and from EU countries has started to challenge the principles of nationality ...
This chapter discusses comparative research on the regulation of the acquisition and loss of citizen...
The chapter examines European sub-state regions as loci of competing self-determination claims and o...
This article presents an analysis of the multiple purposes of citizenship regimes in 36 states in Eu...
Published online 17 June 2013.This article presents an analysis of the multiple purposes of citizens...
This book investigates the legal rules of acquisition and loss of citizenship in Europe. Challenging...
How do states in Western Europe deal with the challenges of migration for citizenship? The legal rel...
From the viewpoint of the state, a person is either a citizen or a foreigner. National citizenship l...
Migration is one of the most contested security issues in the European Union, being represented as a...
This chapter surveys recent developments in citizenship policies across the european union over the ...
The paper proposes an assessment of citizenship rules in European Union countries. First, it designs...
Why do some immigrants naturalize and others not? while much of the literature emphasizes the import...
This paper seeks to integrate the study of citizenship into the main theoretical and substantive deb...
European citizenship, a dormant alter ego of nationality, becomes active and consequential when a re...
Increasing mobility to and from EU countries has started to challenge the principles of nationality ...
This chapter discusses comparative research on the regulation of the acquisition and loss of citizen...
The chapter examines European sub-state regions as loci of competing self-determination claims and o...
This article presents an analysis of the multiple purposes of citizenship regimes in 36 states in Eu...
Published online 17 June 2013.This article presents an analysis of the multiple purposes of citizens...
This book investigates the legal rules of acquisition and loss of citizenship in Europe. Challenging...
How do states in Western Europe deal with the challenges of migration for citizenship? The legal rel...
From the viewpoint of the state, a person is either a citizen or a foreigner. National citizenship l...
Migration is one of the most contested security issues in the European Union, being represented as a...
This chapter surveys recent developments in citizenship policies across the european union over the ...
The paper proposes an assessment of citizenship rules in European Union countries. First, it designs...
Why do some immigrants naturalize and others not? while much of the literature emphasizes the import...
This paper seeks to integrate the study of citizenship into the main theoretical and substantive deb...
European citizenship, a dormant alter ego of nationality, becomes active and consequential when a re...
Increasing mobility to and from EU countries has started to challenge the principles of nationality ...
This chapter discusses comparative research on the regulation of the acquisition and loss of citizen...
The chapter examines European sub-state regions as loci of competing self-determination claims and o...