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Citizenship Policies in the New Europe

Editat de Rainer Bauböck, Bernhard Perchinig, Wiebke Sievers
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 aug 2007
In May 2004 ten new states became members of the European Union, greatly increasing the diversity of historic experiences and contemporary conceptions of national identity within the EU. The authors describe the citizenship laws in each of the ten new countries, as well as Turkey, and analyze their implementation and historical background, demonstrating how citizenship policies have been shaped by large scale emigration, shifting borders, and conflicts over ethnic minorities, and diagnosing tensions between contemporary immigration and European integration. Citizenship Policies of the New Europe will be a timely companion to the two-volume Acquisition and Loss of Nationality, which covers the fifteen older member states.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789053569221
ISBN-10: 9053569227
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 161 x 241 x 43 mm
Greutate: 0.53 kg
Editura: Amsterdam University Press
Colecția Amsterdam University Press

Cuprins

Tables
 
Preface
 
Andre Liebich
Introduction: Altneuländer or the vicissitudes of citizenship in the new EU states
 
Part I: Restored states
 
Priit Järve
Chapter 1: Estonian citizenship: Between ethnic preferences and democratic obligations
 
Kristine Kruma
Chapter 2: Checks and balances in Latvian nationality policies: National agendas and international frameworks
 
Kristine Kruma
Chapter 3: Lithuanian nationality: Trump card to independence and its current challenges
 
Part II: States with histories of shifting borders
 
Agata Górny
Chapter 4: Same letter, new spirit: Nationality regulations and their implementation in Poland
 
Mária M. Kovács and Judit Tóth
Chapter 5: Kin-state responsibility and ethnic citizenship: The Hungarian case
 
Part III: Post-partition states
 
Andrea Baršová
Chapter 6: Czech citizenship legislation between past and future
 
Dagmar Kusá
Chapter 7: The Slovak question and the Slovak answer: Citizenship during the quest for national self-determination and after
 
Felicita Medved
Chapter 8: From civic to ethnic community? The evolution of Slovenian citizenship
 
Part IV: Mediterranean post-imperial states
 
Eugene Buttigieg
Chapter 9: Malta's citizenship law: Evolution and current regime
 
Nicos Trimikliniotis
Chapter 10: Nationality and citizenship in Cyprus since 1945: Communal citizenship, gendered nationality and the adventures of a post-colonial subject in a divided country
 
Zeynep Kadirbeyoglu
Chapter 11: Changing conceptions of citizenship in Turkey
 
List of contributors

Recenzii

"The editors are to be congratulated on bringing together such an authoritative collection of papers and ensuring a common structure and system of analysis that makes them immediately comparable." –Michael Collyer, University of Sussex, United Kingdom

"Theoretically, methodologically and empirically, this is an interesting addition to the earlier two volumes of the NATAC project." –Betty de Hart, University of Nijmegen, The Netherlands

"This work is a worthy completion of the most impressive research ever done on European citizenship laws. For a change, European moneys well spent." –Christian Joppke, American University of Paris, France