Dual Nationality, Social Rights and Federal Citizenship in the U.S. and Europe: The Reinvention of Citizenship

Voorkant
Berghahn Books, 2002 - 341 pagina's

Dual nationality has become one of the most divisive issues linked with the politics of migration in Germany and the US. This volume, the first one in decades to focus on this issue, examines the history, consequences and arguments for and against dual citizenship, and uses dual nationality as the basis of a reflection on important issues closely related to it: social rights, European citizenship and federal citizenship. It pays particular attention to questions such as: What are the major arguments in favor and against dual nationality? Why has dual nationality provoked such contrasting responses, being a non-issue in the UK, for instance, and an extremely controversial one in Germany? How is dual nationality used by states to influence politics and policy in other states? How does it relate to the aim of integrating ethnic migrants and to broader issues in social policy and European integration?

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Inhoudsopgave

Embracing Dual Nationality
19
New Rules for Dual Nationality
34
Plural Citizenships
61
What Rights
100
Germanys Citizenship Law under
121
Dual Nationality and Naturalisation Policies
136
Sociological
158
Dual Nationality
179
Dual Nationality and the French Citizenship
191
U S Citizenship
215
Immigrants and the Divergence
233
Lessons from
264
Dual Citizenship
291
Index
331
Copyright

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Over de auteur (2002)

Randall Hansen is Fellow and Tutor in Politics at Merton College, University of Oxford. Patrick Weil is Director of Research at CNRS in the Centre for Research on the History of Social Movements and Trade Unionism, Paris I - Sorbonne. He is the author of a report for the French Prime Minister on French nationality and immigration law in 1997 and is a member of the French Consultative Commission on Human Rights.

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