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dc.contributor.editorFARGUES, Emilien Louis Maurice
dc.contributor.editorWINTER, Elke
dc.contributor.editorGIBNEY, Matthew
dc.date.accessioned2020-05-19T13:21:24Z
dc.date.available2020-05-19T13:21:24Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.identifier.citationAbingdon ; Oxon : Routledge, 2020en
dc.identifier.isbn9780367896454
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/67067
dc.description.abstractWhen States Take Rights Back draws on contributions by international experts in history, law, political science, and sociology, offering a rare interdisciplinary and comparative examination of citizenship revocation in five countries, revealing hidden government rationales and unintended consequences. Once considered outdated, citizenship revocation – also called deprivation or denationalization – has come back to the political center in many Western liberal states. Contributors scrutinize the positions of stakeholders (e.g. civil servants, representatives of civil society, judges, supranational institutions) and their diverse rationales for citizenship revocation (e.g. allegations of terrorism, treason, espionage, criminal behaviour, and fraud in the naturalisation process). The volume also uncovers the variety of tools that national governments have at their disposition to change existing citizenship revocation laws and policies, and the constraints that they are faced with to actually implement citizenship revocation in daily operations. Finally, contributors underscore the extraordinary severity of sanctions implied by citizenship revocation and offer a nuanced picture of the material and symbolic forms of exclusion not only for those whose citizenship is withdrawn but also for minority groups (wrongly) associated with the aforementioned allegations. Indeed, revocation policies target not merely individuals but specific collective categories, which tend to be ethno-racially constructed and attributed specific location within the international status hierarchy of nation-states. International and interdisciplinary in scope, When States Take Rights Back will be of great interest to scholars of politics, international law, sociology and political and legal history, and Human Rights. The chapters were originally published in Citizenship Studies.en
dc.description.tableofcontents-- 1. Conditional membership: what revocation does to citizenship -- 2. Governing imperial citizenship: a historical account of citizenship revocation -- 3. Discussing the human rights limits on loss of citizenship: a normative-legal perspective on egalitarian arguments regarding Dutch Nationality laws targeting Dutch-Moroccans -- 4. The politics of un-belonging: lessons from Canada’s experiment with citizenship revocation -- 5. Denaturalisation and conceptions of citizenship in the ‘war on terror" -- 6. Simply a matter of compliance with the rules? The moralising and responsibilising function of fraud-based citizenship deprivation in France and the UK -- 7. The concept of allegiance in citizenship law and revocation: an Australian study -- 8. Citizenship revocation: a stress test for liberal democracy
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherRoutledgeen
dc.relation.ispartofseries[Global Citizenship Governance]en
dc.titleWhen states take rights back : citizenship revocation and its discontentsen
dc.typeBooken


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