Justice for Windrush? Redress, Reform, Repeat
Timothy Jacob-Owens and Jo Shaw
Justice for Windrush? Redress, Reform, Repeat
Journal of Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Law
2022
Timothy Jacob-Owens and Jo Shaw
Justice for Windrush? Redress, Reform, Repeat
Journal of Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Law
2022
Anne-Marie Fortier
The speaking citizen: language requirements and linguistic neoliberal colonialisms
Citizenship Studies
2022
Camilla Hawthorne
Contesting Race and Citizenship: Youth Politics in the Black Mediterranean
Cornell University Press
2022
On 8 June 2022, in Alexander v Minister for Home Affairs [2022] HCA 19, the High Court of Australia invalidated a ministerial power of citizenship deprivation. It reasoned that the deprivation was punishment for misconduct. Punishment for misconduct is an exclusively judicial function, one that cannot be conferred on the executive. This characterization of deprivation as punishment rested on a view of citizenship as a fundamental assurance of territorial security.
Anupama Roy
Constitutional moments and resurgent citizenship
Citizenship Studies
2022
Émilien Fargues (ed)
Going global: opportunities and challenges for the development of a comparative research agenda on citizenship policies at the global level
Robert Schuman Centre Working Paper
2022