In two of the busiest migration corridors of the twentieth century, namely Mexico-US and Turkey-Germany, migrants can today be dual citizens. However, the acceptance of dual citizenship did not occur automatically; instead, it followed a period of legal statuses short of full citizenship. This paper conceptualises such statuses as quasi-citizenship, a transitional equilibrium between the absence of plural citizenship and the existence of transnational migration. Focusing on sending states, the emergence of emigrant quasi-citizenship is thus explained, first, in terms of whether the reciprocal regimes of emigration and immigration states diverge on the acceptance of plural citizenship. Second, the stance towards plural citizenship is explain...
As the world continues to be interconnected with its population becoming increasingly mobile, examin...
Fauser M. Emigrant citizenship, privileged local belonging and the option to return: Germans on the ...
How does emigration affect sending states' welfare policies? Existing migration literature has ident...
Abstract In two of the busiest migration corridors of the twentieth century, namely Mexico-US and Tu...
The traditional concept of citizenship (linked to the nation-State) expressed in the theoretical wor...
The dominant model of modern liberal citizenship, in which political identity and membership are con...
The purpose of this paper is to address the question of how does the inclusion or exclusion of polit...
Citizenshipliterature is traditionally dominated with the writings of political theory andis preoccu...
Over the last few decades the number of cases of multiple nationalities worldwide has increased rapi...
Scholarship on nationalism and the state has examined how immigration and nationality policy create ...
Why do some sending states encourage continued emigrant involvement whereas others do not? And to wh...
We argue that the growing literature on emigrant policies should be linked to more general theoretic...
The article is devoted to the new law on dual citizenship in Germany and analyzes its eventual impac...
abstract: this paper proposes that the concept of citizenship refers to the equality and universalit...
Reacting to migrants’ many, ongoing involvements with their home communities, sending states ha...
As the world continues to be interconnected with its population becoming increasingly mobile, examin...
Fauser M. Emigrant citizenship, privileged local belonging and the option to return: Germans on the ...
How does emigration affect sending states' welfare policies? Existing migration literature has ident...
Abstract In two of the busiest migration corridors of the twentieth century, namely Mexico-US and Tu...
The traditional concept of citizenship (linked to the nation-State) expressed in the theoretical wor...
The dominant model of modern liberal citizenship, in which political identity and membership are con...
The purpose of this paper is to address the question of how does the inclusion or exclusion of polit...
Citizenshipliterature is traditionally dominated with the writings of political theory andis preoccu...
Over the last few decades the number of cases of multiple nationalities worldwide has increased rapi...
Scholarship on nationalism and the state has examined how immigration and nationality policy create ...
Why do some sending states encourage continued emigrant involvement whereas others do not? And to wh...
We argue that the growing literature on emigrant policies should be linked to more general theoretic...
The article is devoted to the new law on dual citizenship in Germany and analyzes its eventual impac...
abstract: this paper proposes that the concept of citizenship refers to the equality and universalit...
Reacting to migrants’ many, ongoing involvements with their home communities, sending states ha...
As the world continues to be interconnected with its population becoming increasingly mobile, examin...
Fauser M. Emigrant citizenship, privileged local belonging and the option to return: Germans on the ...
How does emigration affect sending states' welfare policies? Existing migration literature has ident...