scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

Limits of Citizenship: Migrants and Postnational Membership in Europe

Reads0
Chats0
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.

read more

Citations
More filters

Democratic Citizenship and Its Changes as Empirical Phenomenon

Giovanni Moro
TL;DR: In this article, the authors contribute to the empirical approach towards the study of democratic citizenship, while avoiding both reductionist and all-embracing uses of the concept, and deal with three issues: the identification of the phenomenon, the observation of the dynamics of change, and the assessment of the ongoing evolutions of citizenship.
Journal ArticleDOI

Verfassungen als Spiegel globaler Normen

TL;DR: In this paper, a quantitativen Inhaltsanalyse der Familien- und Gleichberechtigungsartikel in nationalen Verfassungen (n = 164) untersucht der Aufsatz.
Journal ArticleDOI

Power sharing at the local level: evidence on opting-in for non-citizen voting rights

TL;DR: In this paper, the conditions under which citizens are willing to share power with non-citizens were studied in the Swiss canton of Grisons, where municipalities are free to decide on the introduction of non-citizen voting rights at the local level.
Book

Emigration and Political Development

TL;DR: Moses et al. as mentioned in this paper explored the relationship between emigration and political development, arguing that emigration influences political development and introduced a new cross-national database of annual emigration rates and analyzes specific cases of international emigration under varying political and economic contexts.