EU Citizenship at the Edges of Freedom of Movement
Katarina Hyltén-Cavallius
EU Citizenship at the Edges of Freedom of Movement
Hart Publishing
2020
Katarina Hyltén-Cavallius
EU Citizenship at the Edges of Freedom of Movement
Hart Publishing
2020
The Tokyo District Court argued that allowing dual citizenship for Japanese citizens ‘could cause conflict in the rights and obligations between countries, as well as between the individual and the state’.
Catalina Amuedo-Dorantes and Mary Lopez
Recent changes in immigration policy and U.S. naturalization patterns
Review of Economics of the Household
2020
Anca Turcu and Robert Urbatsch
Aversion to far-left parties among Europeans voting abroad
Comparative European Politics
2020
In its first-ever decision on the right to nationality, issued in late December, the UN Human Rights Committee calls on the Netherlands to enact a framework for addressing statelessness that puts human rights first.
Our next webinar gathers six speakers in roundtable discussions on the opportunities and challenges of investor citizenship in a globalising world.
Traditionally understudied by scholars of social policy, migration and territorial politics, the rescaling of socio-economic and cultural policies to the subnational level has, combined with decentralisation reforms, turned immigrant integration, encompassing the socio-economic, cultural-religious and legal-political realms, into a competence of sub-national authorities.
After the last amendment, that took place in 2018, the Portuguese Nationality Act was revised once again on the 10th November 2020. These amendments involve a major revision of the basic principles of the Portuguese Nationality Law.
Odile Ammann
Passports for Sale: How (Un)Meritocratic Are Citizenship by Investment Programmes?
European Journal of Migration and Law
2020