Revising the Integration-Citizenship Nexus in Europe : Sites, Policies, and Bureaucracies of Belonging.
Main Author: | |
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Other Authors: | , |
Format: | eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Cham :
Springer International Publishing AG,
2023.
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Edition: | 1st ed. |
Series: | IMISCOE Research Series
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Click to View |
Table of Contents:
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Acknowledgements
- Contents
- Editors and Contributors
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Chapter 1: Conceptualising the Citizenship-Integration Nexus
- 1.1 Conceptualising the Citizenship-Integration Nexus
- 1.2 Structure of the Book
- References
- Part I: Integration Through Citizenship
- Chapter 2: Ideas of Integration in Citizenship Laws and Citizenship Acquisition Procedures in Belgium and the UK
- 2.1 Policies of Naturalization
- 2.2 Methodology and Research Design
- 2.3 Integrationism in UK and Belgian Nationality Legislation
- 2.4 UK: The Routinisation of Integration Requirements
- 2.5 Belgium: Integration as the Letter of the Law
- 2.6 Conclusions
- References
- Chapter 3: Becoming Dutch at What Cost? Increasing Application Fees and Naturalisation Rates of EU Immigrants in the Netherlands
- 3.1 Introduction
- 3.2 Naturalisation Fees in the Netherlands
- 3.3 Data and Methodology
- 3.3.1 Data
- 3.3.2 Identification Strategy
- 3.4 Analysis
- 3.4.1 Trends
- 3.5 Single-Difference Regression: Main Effect and Impact Heterogeneity
- 3.6 Double-Difference Regression: Conditioned Relevance of the Fee Increase
- 3.7 Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 4: Citizenship and Naturalisation for Migrants in the UK After Brexit
- 4.1 British Nationality Law
- 4.2 Who Becomes a UK Citizen? Differences Between EU-born and Non-EU Born Migrants
- 4.3 Factors Affecting the Acquisition of Citizenship Among EU and Non-EU citizens, and the Role of Brexit
- 4.3.1 Origin Countries
- 4.3.2 Age at Migration and Years of Residence
- 4.3.3 Citizenship Policy in the Origin and Destination Countries: Dual Nationality Policies, Visa Type and Citizenship Fees
- 4.4 Conclusions and Gaps in the Data
- References
- Part II: Integration from Below
- Chapter 5: Immigrant Economic Rights in the European Union.
- 5.1 The Economic Rights of Migrants
- 5.2 Empirical Approach
- 5.2.1 Integration below Citizenship: Social and Psychological Integration in the EU
- 5.3 Measurement
- 5.3.1 Economic Rights
- 5.4 Analysis
- 5.4.1 Integration at Citizenship: Naturalisation Within the EU
- 5.5 Measurement
- 5.6 Analysis
- 5.7 Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 6: Migrants, New Citizens, Co-Citizens and Citizens by Adoption - Regionalist Parties' Framing of Immigrants in the Basque Country, Corsica, South Tyrol, Scotland and Wales
- 6.1 Introduction
- 6.2 Actors and Processes of Constructing Regional Citizens through 'Othering'
- 6.3 SNRPs in the Basque Country, Corsica, South Tyrol, Scotland and Wales
- 6.4 Regionalist Parties' Framing of Immigrants: From 'Unwanted' Migrants to 'New Citizens', 'Co-Citizens' and 'Citizens by Adoption'
- 6.4.1 Migrants - Those Who Do Not Belong to 'Us'
- 6.4.2 Citizens: Migrants Who Belong to 'Us'
- 6.5 Conclusion
- References
- Primary Documents
- Chapter 7: Intercultural Citizenship in the Making: Public Space and Belonging in Discriminatory Environments
- 7.1 Introduction: The Debate on the Conditions of Interculturalism
- 7.2 Framing the Interculturalism, Public Space and Citizenship-Making Debate
- 7.3 Self-Perceptions on Discrimination and the Mitigating Effects of Place-Based Belonging
- 7.3.1 The Empirical Material: Analysing Data from Different Research Projects
- 7.3.2 Self-Perceptions on Discrimination
- 7.3.3 The Relation to Place and the Construction of Belonging
- 7.4 Concluding Remarks: Interculturalism from below
- References
- Chapter 8: "In London, I Am a European Citizen": Brexit, Emotions, and the Politics of Belonging
- 8.1 Introduction
- 8.1.1 Belonging and the New Politics of Belonging as EU Citizens in Post-Brexit Britain
- 8.1.2 Methodology.
- 8.1.3 Brexit, Emotions and the Intersectional Politics of Belonging
- 8.1.4 Emplacing Brexit and Urban Citizenship
- 8.1.5 'In London, I am a European Citizen': EU Citizenship and the Nested Politics of Belonging
- 8.1.6 Conclusion: London's Unique Position as the Hub of the Largest EU 'Diaspora' Outside the EU
- References
- Part III: Integration from Above
- Chapter 9: "It Just Feels Weird" - Irish External Voting and the 'Brexit Irish'
- 9.1 Introduction
- 9.2 External Voting
- 9.3 The Irish Context
- 9.3.1 Emigration and Diaspora
- 9.3.2 Irish External Votes - Policy &
- Campaigning
- 9.4 Brexit
- Irish Citizens in the UK and NI
- 9.4.1 Irish Citizenship Eligibility for UK and NI Born Residents
- 9.5 The 'Brexit Irish'
- 9.6 Project and Method
- 9.7 External Voting and the 'Brexit' Irish
- 9.7.1 A Move to Vote?
- 9.7.2 Connections/Disconnections
- 9.7.3 Reluctant to Influence
- 9.7.4 Northern Ireland
- 9.8 Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 10: Between Integration and Dissociation: Intra-European Immigrants' Life Experiences in Romania
- 10.1 Introduction
- 10.2 Mobile EU Citizens and Integration
- 10.3 Immigration to Romania and Previous Evidence on Integration
- 10.3.1 Expectations: An Atypical Integration
- 10.4 Data and Methods
- 10.5 Results
- 10.5.1 Linguistic Integration: Romanian Proficiency
- 10.5.2 Economic Integration: Employment and Entrepreneurship
- 10.5.3 Navigational Integration: Access to Healthcare
- 10.5.4 Social Integration: Volunteering, Interest in Politics, Informal Relations with Locals
- 10.6 Conclusion
- References
- Chapter 11: EU Citizenship: A Tool for Integration?
- 11.1 Introduction
- 11.2 What Is EU Citizenship?
- 11.3 The Evolution of an Incomplete, Imbalanced, and Inconsistent Citizenship
- 11.4 Consequences of Weak EU Citizenship: Some Examples
- 11.4.1 Enlargement.
- 11.4.2 Immigration and Eligibility for National Citizenship
- 11.4.3 Brexit and Suprastatelessness
- 11.5 Discussion
- References
- Appendix
- Chapter 3
- Chapter 4
- Chapter 6.