"We investigate the origin, impact and evolution of the legal institution of citizenship. We compile a dataset across countries of the world from the 19th century, which documents how citizenship laws have evolved from the common and civil law traditions. Contrary to the predictions of legal theory, we show that the original, exogenously-given citizenship laws did not matter for migration flows during the early, mass migrations period. After WWII, citizenship-granting institutions are no longer exogenous as they are shown to be determined by international migration flows, border stability, the establishment of democracy, the welfare burden, cultural factors, and colonial history." (author's abstract)"Es wird die Entstehung, die Bedeutung un...
"Recently, the link between immigration, citizenship and national identity has emerged as a major po...
This study concerns how ought constitutionalism resolve the question of undesired migrants. Through ...
This article explores the distinctly legal vagueness that underpinned citizenship and subjecthood in...
We investigate the origin, impact and evolution of the legal institution of citizenship. We compile ...
We investigate the origin, impact and evolution of citizenship laws. Citizenship laws originate from...
We investigate the origin, impact and evolution of the legal institution of citizenship. We compile ...
We investigate the origin and evolution of the legal institution of citizenship. We compile a data s...
We investigate the evolution of the legal institution of citizenship from a political economy perspe...
Citizenship is frequently invoked both as an instrument and goal of immigrant integration. Yet, in m...
In this article we explore how constitutionally enshrined and historically conditioned conceptions ...
Increasing immigration numbers in many parts of the world make it crucial for policy makers to thin...
In this article, we first test theories on immigrant rights across 29 countries from Europe, Africa,...
First Online: 04 June 2022Historically, citizenship has been a gatekeeper to political and social ri...
The argument of this paper is that several empirical puzzles in the citizenship literature are roote...
Der Artikel geht der Frage nach, inwiefern die geöffneten Türen für die Immigration Hochqualifiziert...
"Recently, the link between immigration, citizenship and national identity has emerged as a major po...
This study concerns how ought constitutionalism resolve the question of undesired migrants. Through ...
This article explores the distinctly legal vagueness that underpinned citizenship and subjecthood in...
We investigate the origin, impact and evolution of the legal institution of citizenship. We compile ...
We investigate the origin, impact and evolution of citizenship laws. Citizenship laws originate from...
We investigate the origin, impact and evolution of the legal institution of citizenship. We compile ...
We investigate the origin and evolution of the legal institution of citizenship. We compile a data s...
We investigate the evolution of the legal institution of citizenship from a political economy perspe...
Citizenship is frequently invoked both as an instrument and goal of immigrant integration. Yet, in m...
In this article we explore how constitutionally enshrined and historically conditioned conceptions ...
Increasing immigration numbers in many parts of the world make it crucial for policy makers to thin...
In this article, we first test theories on immigrant rights across 29 countries from Europe, Africa,...
First Online: 04 June 2022Historically, citizenship has been a gatekeeper to political and social ri...
The argument of this paper is that several empirical puzzles in the citizenship literature are roote...
Der Artikel geht der Frage nach, inwiefern die geöffneten Türen für die Immigration Hochqualifiziert...
"Recently, the link between immigration, citizenship and national identity has emerged as a major po...
This study concerns how ought constitutionalism resolve the question of undesired migrants. Through ...
This article explores the distinctly legal vagueness that underpinned citizenship and subjecthood in...