The Scramble for Citizens shows us how three states (Italy, Spain and Argentina) have competed and struggled to claim a portion of the population that has moved between its borders over the past two centuries. In a flexible, clear, and concise way, David Cook-Martin formulates a historical reconstruction of the strategies adopted by the states in order to create and maintain links with a mobile population, while allowing us to know the tactics that people have developed to respond to these competitive dynamics
Are migrants ‘special individuals’? This apparently innocent question has been long overlooked by mi...
This book is a collection of papers originally presented at the 1982 Eighth International Economic H...
Kerry Ryan reviews the books 'Language testing, migration and citizenship: cross-national perspectiv...
Review of the book 'Contesting citizenship: irregular migrants and new frontiers of the political', ...
A review of the book "The Politics of Nation-Building: Making Co-Nationals, Refugees, and Minorities...
Transnational migration emerged as one of the most important political and social issues at the end ...
In Citizens of Nowhere: How Europe can be Saved from Itself, Lorenzo Marsili and Niccolo Milanese of...
This is a superb synthesis of theoretical issues and empirical surveys of the current state of the a...
It has been a long-standing criticism of migration scholarship that despite the increasing interest ...
The article reviews two books about civil society and citizenship, including Transnational Civil So...
Analyzing over 200 years of migration and citizenship laws, Dr. Acosta explains how ten South Americ...
Migration represents one of the key issues in both Italian and European politics, and it has trigger...
In three decades the immigrant population in the U.S. has increased from 10 million to more than 28 ...
Dual citizenship is a concept that has greatly transformed since the term’s first use in the early 1...
Recent scholarly debates in Europe have become preoccupied with the effects of increased ethnic dive...
Are migrants ‘special individuals’? This apparently innocent question has been long overlooked by mi...
This book is a collection of papers originally presented at the 1982 Eighth International Economic H...
Kerry Ryan reviews the books 'Language testing, migration and citizenship: cross-national perspectiv...
Review of the book 'Contesting citizenship: irregular migrants and new frontiers of the political', ...
A review of the book "The Politics of Nation-Building: Making Co-Nationals, Refugees, and Minorities...
Transnational migration emerged as one of the most important political and social issues at the end ...
In Citizens of Nowhere: How Europe can be Saved from Itself, Lorenzo Marsili and Niccolo Milanese of...
This is a superb synthesis of theoretical issues and empirical surveys of the current state of the a...
It has been a long-standing criticism of migration scholarship that despite the increasing interest ...
The article reviews two books about civil society and citizenship, including Transnational Civil So...
Analyzing over 200 years of migration and citizenship laws, Dr. Acosta explains how ten South Americ...
Migration represents one of the key issues in both Italian and European politics, and it has trigger...
In three decades the immigrant population in the U.S. has increased from 10 million to more than 28 ...
Dual citizenship is a concept that has greatly transformed since the term’s first use in the early 1...
Recent scholarly debates in Europe have become preoccupied with the effects of increased ethnic dive...
Are migrants ‘special individuals’? This apparently innocent question has been long overlooked by mi...
This book is a collection of papers originally presented at the 1982 Eighth International Economic H...
Kerry Ryan reviews the books 'Language testing, migration and citizenship: cross-national perspectiv...