Received 14 Jul 2015, Accepted 18 Jan 2016, Published online: 01 Jun 2016Citizenship does not equal belonging. In this paper, we investigate how the disjunction between the ‘imagined community’ and the formal citizenry impacts on citizens’ rights. In particular, we analyse decision-making on the family migration rights of citizens in France, Germany and the Netherlands. Our analysis shows that in these three countries, notwithstanding their different migration and citizenship regimes, the reduction of citizens’ family migration rights is based on the same discursive mechanism: the ‘membership’ of citizens of migrant origin who marry a partner from abroad is called into question. As they are excluded from membership of the imagined community...
Traditionally, there are two contrasting views on the way in which European states instrumentalise n...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 79-82).Policy convergence within the United Kingdom and Fran...
Citizenship is frequently invoked both as an instrument and goal of immigrant integration. Yet, in m...
Citizenship does not equal belonging. In this paper, we investigate how the disjunction between the ...
First Published November 12, 2014In many European countries, family migration polices have grown inc...
Published: 8 September 2015Traditionally, there are two contrasting views on the way states can use ...
Traditionally, there are two contrasting views on the way states can use naturalisation and immigran...
This paper studies the distribution and legitimisation of civil, political and social entitlements t...
Across Europe, family related migration has moved to the centre of public debates about migration an...
In many Western countries, rights that once belonged solely to citizens are being extended to immigr...
How do states in Western Europe deal with the challenges of migration for citizenship? The legal rel...
No abstractPostwar migration in Europe, in conjunction with the phenomenon of globalization and the ...
This article investigates the evolving notion of belonging through the lens of Germany\u27s new fram...
This special issue investigates citizenship and belonging in mixed-status families, i.e. families co...
As one of the predominant means of legal entry into the European Union (EU), family reunification ha...
Traditionally, there are two contrasting views on the way in which European states instrumentalise n...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 79-82).Policy convergence within the United Kingdom and Fran...
Citizenship is frequently invoked both as an instrument and goal of immigrant integration. Yet, in m...
Citizenship does not equal belonging. In this paper, we investigate how the disjunction between the ...
First Published November 12, 2014In many European countries, family migration polices have grown inc...
Published: 8 September 2015Traditionally, there are two contrasting views on the way states can use ...
Traditionally, there are two contrasting views on the way states can use naturalisation and immigran...
This paper studies the distribution and legitimisation of civil, political and social entitlements t...
Across Europe, family related migration has moved to the centre of public debates about migration an...
In many Western countries, rights that once belonged solely to citizens are being extended to immigr...
How do states in Western Europe deal with the challenges of migration for citizenship? The legal rel...
No abstractPostwar migration in Europe, in conjunction with the phenomenon of globalization and the ...
This article investigates the evolving notion of belonging through the lens of Germany\u27s new fram...
This special issue investigates citizenship and belonging in mixed-status families, i.e. families co...
As one of the predominant means of legal entry into the European Union (EU), family reunification ha...
Traditionally, there are two contrasting views on the way in which European states instrumentalise n...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 79-82).Policy convergence within the United Kingdom and Fran...
Citizenship is frequently invoked both as an instrument and goal of immigrant integration. Yet, in m...