Anticolonial citizenship: from slavery to Windrush
Timothy Jacob-Owens,
Anticolonial citizenship: from slavery to Windrush,
Citizenship Studies,
2025. Read More …
Timothy Jacob-Owens,
Anticolonial citizenship: from slavery to Windrush,
Citizenship Studies,
2025. Read More …
Timothy Jacob-Owens,
Foreign allegiance and constitutional citizenship: postcolonial (dis)continuities in the Commonwealth Caribbean,
Comparative Constitutional Studies,
2024. Read More …
The increased number of British nationals acquiring citizenship elsewhere in Europe in the wake of the Brexit referendum has been widely reported. New data from Eurostat, combined with statistical analysis, inform us that over 90 thousand British citizens have acquired a European passport, eight years after the 2016 referendum, who likely would not have done so had it not been for Brexit. These numbers are in addition to the around 120 thousand British nationals who are reported to have acquired Irish citizenship as a child or grandchild of Irish citizens. Read More …
The term ‘passportisation’ refers to the practice of extending nationality to substantial numbers of individuals beyond the boundary of the state, including by forcible imposition of nationality. At an international level, two effects – each potentially an aim of value to the state extending its nationality – are the erosion of the territorial sovereignty of the state of residence by the new ability of the state of nationality to intervene to protect those possessing its nationality, conformably with article 51 of the UN Charter, and reduced scope for the individual to seek international protection as against a state of his or her nationality. In the post-Soviet period passportisation been much practised by the Russian Federation, in Georgia, Ukraine, and elsewhere. On 18 June 2024 Dr Gaiane Nuridzhanian provided a helpful account of recent decisions touching on it, including in the context of human rights. Since then the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights has decided an interstate case concerning Russian activities concerning Crimea, Ukraine v Russia (Re Crimea) appns 20958/14 and 38334/18) [2024] ECHR 569, which within its wider decision sets out significant findings regarding passportisation. Read More …
Lior Erez,
Self-Determination and the Limits on the Right to Include,
Political Studies,
2025. Read More …
Luke Dimitrios Spieker and Ferdinand Weber,
Bonds without belonging? The genuine link in international, union, and nationality law,
Yearbook of European Law,
2025. Read More …
Péter D. Szigeti,
The Dilemmas of Schrödinger’s Citizenship,
Harvard International Law Journal,
2025. Read More …
Among his first actions as re-installed president, Donald Trump issued a January 20 executive order purporting to roll back territorial birthright citizenship in the United States. Under the order, US citizenship would extend at birth only to children who have at least one citizen or permanent resident parent. Children born to unauthorised immigrants and temporary visa holders would be denied birth citizenship. Read More …