Supranational citizenship and the challenge of diversity : immigrants, citizens and member states in the EU /
In Supranational Citizenship and the Challenge of Diversity Francesca Strumia explores how European citizenship contributes to filter diversities in the EU, by shifting insider/outsider divides as experienced by immigrants, perceived by citizens and set by member states
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Main Author: | |
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Format: | Book |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Leiden :
Martinus Nijhoff Publishers,
2013
Leiden [Netherlands] : 2013 |
Series: | Nijhoff studies in EU law ;
v. 4 Nijhoff studies in EU law v. 4 |
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Table of Contents:
- Supranational Citizenship and the Challenge of Diversity; Copyright; Contents; List of Tables and Figures; Acknowledgments; Introduction: Citizenship, Diversity, and Divides; 1. The Quest of Distinctiveness and Inclusion- A Comparative Analysis of Internal Borders and Divides in the US and the EU; 1.1. Introduction; 1.2 Frame of Analysis; 1.2.1 Citizenship through the Lens of Nationality, Immigration and Free Movement; 1.2.2 3 Notions of Internal Borders; 1.2.3 Preliminary Notions on Legal Membership and Central Authority
- The quest of distinctiveness and inclusion : a comparative analysis of internal borders and divides in the U.S. and the EU
- Citizens and others in the EU : legal sameness, societal difference
- Insider/outsider divides in the EU
- Supranational citizenship as mutual recognition of belonging
- 1.3. Immigration, Nationality, Free Movement: A Map of US and EU Internal Frontiers1.3.1. Immigration Regimes; 1.3.2 Nationality and Inclusion; 1.3.3 Free Movement Regimes; 1.4 Membership and Divides in the US and the EU; 2. Citizens and Others in the EU: Legal Sameness, Societal Difference; 2.2.1. The Literature on European Identity; 2.2.2. The Peculiarity of the Citizenship Norm; 2.2.3. The Compliance Approach; 2.3.1. Dynamics of European Citizenship and the Evolution of Legal Sameness; 2.3.2. The Dilution of Societal Sameness in the EU; 2.3.3. Towards the Mismatch
- 2.4.1. Episodes of Resistance2.5.1. European Interactions, Dissonance and Acculturation into European Sameness; 2.5.2. Triggering Acculturation through Legitimacy; 2.5.3. Citizenship and Belonging Moments; 2.5.4. A Critical Mass of Sharing; 2.5.5. The Weaknesses of the Sameness Approach; 3. Insider/Outsider Divides in the EU; 4. Supranational Citizenship as Mutual Recognition of Belonging; 4.1.1. First Proposition; 4.1.2. Second Proposition; 4.4.1. The Operation of Rules of Mutual Recognition in Respect of Immigrants
- 4.4.2. Procedural and Substantive Issues Concerning the Extension of Mutual Recognition4.7.1. Immigrants; 4.7.2. Member States; 4.7.3. Natives; Conclusion; List of Works Cited; Index