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Limits of Citizenship: Migrants and Postnational Membership in Europe

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TLDR
Soysal et al. as mentioned in this paper compare the different ways European nations incorporate immigrants, how these policies evolved, and how they are influenced by international human rights discourse, and suggest a possible accommodation to these shifts: specifically, a model of post-national membership that derives its legitimacy from universal personhood, rather than national belonging.
Abstract
In many Western countries, rights that once belonged solely to citizens are being extended to immigrants, a trend that challenges the nature and basis of citizenship at a time when nation-states are fortifying their boundaries through restirictive border controls and expressions of nationalist ideologies. In this book, Yasemin Soysal compares the different ways European nations incorporate immigrants, how these policies evolved, and how they are influenced by international human rights discourse. Soysal focuses on postwar international migration, paying particular attention to "guestworkers." Taking an in-depth look at France, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom, she identifies three major patterns that reflect the varying emphasis particular states place on individual versus corporate groups as the basis for incorporation. She finds that the global expansion and intensification of human rights discourse puts nation-states under increasing outside pressure to extend membership rights to aliens, resulting in an increasingly blurred line between citizen and noncitizen. Finally, she suggests a possible accommodation to these shifts: specifically, a model of post-national membership that derives its legitimacy from universal personhood, rather than national belonging. This fresh approach to the study of citizenship, rights, and immigration will be invaluable to anyone involved in issues of human rights, international migration, and transnational cultural interactions, as well as to those who study the contemporary transformation of the nation-state, nationalism, and globalization.

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Book ChapterDOI

The Rights of Others: Democratic iterations: the local, the national, and the global

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the ambivalences of disaggregated citizenship and the end of the unitary model with dismay, arguing that democratic rule has been based on various constitutive illusions such as the homogeneity of the people and territorial self-sufficiency.
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Post-nationalism re-considered: a case study of the ‘No One Is Illegal’ movement in Canada

Salina Abji
- 11 Jun 2013 - 
TL;DR: In this article, a case analysis of a migrant rights movement in Canada is used as evidence of a post-national ethics in practice, and a re-consideration of the usefulness of postnationalism within current scholarship on precarious immigration status.
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Mononationals, hyphenationals, and shadow-nationals: multiple citizenship as practice

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined dual citizens' identifications to their respective citizenships and how these affiliations transfer into possible citizen participation, based on extensive analysis of survey (n =335) and interviews (n ǫ = 48) carried out among dual citizens living in Finland.
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Biological citizenship across the borders: politics of DNA profiling for family reunification

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore complicated connections of biological traits to both national and post-national modes of citizenship, and demonstrate that biology plays an important role in decision-making on citizenship rights and inclusion and exclusion in the nation-state even today.
Journal ArticleDOI

Citizenship as Privilege and Power: Australian Educators’ Lived Experiences as Citizens

TL;DR: Schugurensky et al. as discussed by the authors describe how educators, as mediators of constructions of citizenship in the education system and specifically in the classroom, perceive their lived experiences as citizens in an era of globalization.