The recent debate over the changes to the ‘Life in the UK’ citizenship test offers another opportunity to reflect on the testing of would-be citizens in liberal democracies. The citizenship test has often been understood as part of the ‘strengthening’ of national borders: set within a discourse of fears over high levels of migration and the risk to cultural homogeneity. Furthermore, it has been viewed as an illustration of the death of multiculturalism and presented as an illiberal strategy of cultural assimilation. I propose that whilst the notion of ‘testing’ is built out of fears regarding ‘threatening’ difference and ‘community cohesion’, what the UK testing process presents is an explicitly liberal strategy of governing. Drawing on the...
Citizenship in the UK has in recent times been explicitly framed as a privilege not a right, granted...
On the basis of the case studies collected in this special issue, the paper analyses what is philoso...
On the basis of the case studies collected in this special issue, the paper analyses what is philoso...
Passing the Life in the UK Test is an essential requirement for those who seek UK citizenship. This ...
Thom Brooks has examined the UK citizenship test and finds that it is highly irrelevant to living in...
Debates about integration, British values and identity, who can belong and who can become a citizen,...
The British Citizenship Test was introduced in 2005 as one of a raft of new procedures aimed at addr...
In ‘Are Citizenship Tests Necessarily Illiberal?’, Michael Blake argues that difficult citizenship t...
Since the early 2000s several European countries have introduced language and citizenship tests as n...
The 'Life in the United Kingdom' test is an important part of British immigration policy attracting ...
This article explores the role of two different types of organisations which act as brokers on behal...
Anyone trying to be a citizen has to pass through a set of practices trying to be a state. This pape...
European Union law has curtailed the traditional discretion Member States have in ordering non-natio...
While the rise of neoliberal discourse in Australia during the term of the Howard government (1996–2...
This chapter sheds some light on why and how citizenship revocation currently acts as a bor- derline...
Citizenship in the UK has in recent times been explicitly framed as a privilege not a right, granted...
On the basis of the case studies collected in this special issue, the paper analyses what is philoso...
On the basis of the case studies collected in this special issue, the paper analyses what is philoso...
Passing the Life in the UK Test is an essential requirement for those who seek UK citizenship. This ...
Thom Brooks has examined the UK citizenship test and finds that it is highly irrelevant to living in...
Debates about integration, British values and identity, who can belong and who can become a citizen,...
The British Citizenship Test was introduced in 2005 as one of a raft of new procedures aimed at addr...
In ‘Are Citizenship Tests Necessarily Illiberal?’, Michael Blake argues that difficult citizenship t...
Since the early 2000s several European countries have introduced language and citizenship tests as n...
The 'Life in the United Kingdom' test is an important part of British immigration policy attracting ...
This article explores the role of two different types of organisations which act as brokers on behal...
Anyone trying to be a citizen has to pass through a set of practices trying to be a state. This pape...
European Union law has curtailed the traditional discretion Member States have in ordering non-natio...
While the rise of neoliberal discourse in Australia during the term of the Howard government (1996–2...
This chapter sheds some light on why and how citizenship revocation currently acts as a bor- derline...
Citizenship in the UK has in recent times been explicitly framed as a privilege not a right, granted...
On the basis of the case studies collected in this special issue, the paper analyses what is philoso...
On the basis of the case studies collected in this special issue, the paper analyses what is philoso...