European Citizenship and EU Immigration: A Demoi-cratic Bridge between the Third Country Nationals’ Right to Belong and the Member States’ Power to Exclude
European citizenship entails, for EU nationals, a right to belong across borders. This article questions the implications of this latter right for the status of third country nationals in the EU. It contributes to address a gap between the literature on European citizenship and the literature on the...
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | European citizenship entails, for EU nationals, a right to belong across borders. This article
questions the implications of this latter right for the status of third country nationals in the EU. It
contributes to address a gap between the literature on European citizenship and the literature on
the admission and civic integration of third country nationals. The article begins by tracing a
disconnect in the rules and narratives on admission and naturalisation of third country nationals
in the EU. This is a disconnect between logics of individual rights protection, which European
citizenship infiltrates, and logics of state sovereignty and governmental discretion, which
otherwise dominate relevant rules and narratives. The article relies on the political science
literature on mutual recognition and demoicracy to reinterpret European citizenship’s norm of
belonging across borders so as to reconcile the disconnect. Ultimately, the theoretical bridge
that the article draws between citizenship narratives and immigration narratives offers a novel
perspective on the tension between liberal values and integration discourses in Europe. It also
sets out a possible frame to begin rethinking rules of engagement and cooperation in the context
of the EU common immigration policy. |
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DOI: | 10.1111/eulj.12197 |