Social rights are, to all effects, ‘human rights’ and as such they should be equally enjoyed by every human being. International law, however, does not prevent states from differentiating between nationals and non- nationals, nor among different categories of non- nationals, provided that differential treatments are based on reasonable and objective criteria. The need to maintain control over immigration fluxes, the opportunity to reserve ‘resource- hungry’ social benefits to those who have significantly contributed to funding them or who have a stronger link with the social fabric, and the will to thwart illegal immigration may all constitute reasonable basis for differentiation. The principle of proportionality, however, calls on the st...
The contemporary universal and regional international legal system of human rights protection forms ...
By virtue of conceptual abstraction, the notion of nationality plays a pivotal role in liberal democ...
The presence on national territory of those outside of national membership has long prompted interes...
Social rights are, to all effects, ‘human rights’ and as such they should be equally enjoyed by ever...
The deprivations with which we are here concerned are those imposed upon individuals on the ground t...
According to the traditional state sovereignty view in the ethics of immigration literature, societi...
Nations zealously guard their borders and carefully vet migrants. This consigns many people to live ...
Statelessness is the absence of the right to have a legal connection between nationality and state. ...
Nationality is essentially an institution of domestic law, but it has consequences in international ...
This contribution analyses the outer limits of the eu prohibition of discrimination on the grounds o...
The universal citizenship rights can not protect the interests of national minorities by systemati...
I investigate the semantic and practical complexity of social rights, together with the obligations ...
In this chapter it is submitted that going beyond the distinction between citizens, aliens and huma...
Legitimate states have a general right to control their borders and decide who to admit as future ci...
This chapter argues that non-discrimination law can and should offer enhanced protection against leg...
The contemporary universal and regional international legal system of human rights protection forms ...
By virtue of conceptual abstraction, the notion of nationality plays a pivotal role in liberal democ...
The presence on national territory of those outside of national membership has long prompted interes...
Social rights are, to all effects, ‘human rights’ and as such they should be equally enjoyed by ever...
The deprivations with which we are here concerned are those imposed upon individuals on the ground t...
According to the traditional state sovereignty view in the ethics of immigration literature, societi...
Nations zealously guard their borders and carefully vet migrants. This consigns many people to live ...
Statelessness is the absence of the right to have a legal connection between nationality and state. ...
Nationality is essentially an institution of domestic law, but it has consequences in international ...
This contribution analyses the outer limits of the eu prohibition of discrimination on the grounds o...
The universal citizenship rights can not protect the interests of national minorities by systemati...
I investigate the semantic and practical complexity of social rights, together with the obligations ...
In this chapter it is submitted that going beyond the distinction between citizens, aliens and huma...
Legitimate states have a general right to control their borders and decide who to admit as future ci...
This chapter argues that non-discrimination law can and should offer enhanced protection against leg...
The contemporary universal and regional international legal system of human rights protection forms ...
By virtue of conceptual abstraction, the notion of nationality plays a pivotal role in liberal democ...
The presence on national territory of those outside of national membership has long prompted interes...