Debating European Citizenship.
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Place / Publishing House: | Cham : : Springer International Publishing AG,, 2018. {copy}2019. |
Year of Publication: | 2018 |
Edition: | 1st ed. |
Language: | English |
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Bauböck, Rainer. Debating European Citizenship. 1st ed. Cham : Springer International Publishing AG, 2018. {copy}2019. 1 online resource (304 pages) text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier IMISCOE Research Series Debating European Citizenship -- Acknowledgements -- Preface -- Contents -- About the editor -- Contributors -- EU citizenship: Still a Fundamental Status? -- Introduction -- Challenges and complexities of EU citizenship -- Europeanisation and de-Europeanisation in EU citizenship -- How far does EU citizenship constrain member state sovereignty in matters of nationality law? -- Can EU citizenship be retained after Brexit? -- Part I:: Should EU Citizens Living in Other Member States Vote There in National Elections? -- EU-Citizens Should Have the Right to Vote in National Elections -- EU Citizens Should Have Voting Rights in National Elections, But in Which Country? -- A European or a National Solution to the Democratic Deficit? -- EU Accession to the ECHR Requires Ensuring the Franchise for EU Citizens in National Elections -- How to Enfranchise Second Country Nationals? Test the Options for Best Fit, Easiest Adoption and Lowest Costs -- What's in a People? Social Facts, Individual Choice, and the European Union -- I. -- II. -- III. -- Testing the Bonds of Solidarity in Europe's Common Citizenship Area -- 'An Ever Closer Union Among the Peoples of Europe': Union Citizenship, Democracy, Rights and the Enfranchisement of Second Country Nationals -- Five Pragmatic Reasons for a Dialogue with and Between Member States on Free Movement and Voting Rights -- Don't Start with Europeans First. An Initiative for Extending Voting Rights Should also Promote Access to Citizenship for Third Country Nationals -- Voting Rights and Beyond… -- One Cannot Promote Free Movement of EU Citizens and Restrict Their Political Participation -- 1) The weight of principles -- 2) Tackling the democratic deficit without the methodological privileging of the state -- 3) The road travelled thus far -- 4) Free movement and EU citizenship are not only about spacing. they are also about timing -- Legal norms should reflect social practices and EU citizens' lived encounters -- Second Country EU Citizens Voting in National Elections Is an Important Step, but Other Steps Should Be Taken First -- A More Comprehensive Reform Is Needed to Ensure That Mobile Citizens Can Vote -- Incremental Changes Are not Enough - Voting Rights Are a Matter of Democratic Principle -- Mobile Union Citizens Should Have Portable Voting Rights Within the EU -- Political rights for mobile Union citizens -- Why naturalisation solves too little too late -- Political rights for Union citizens reloaded? -- Concluding Remarks: Righting Democratic Wrongs -- Part II:: Freedom of Movement Under Attack: Is it Worth Defending as the Core of EU Citizenship? -- Freedom of Movement Needs to Be Defended as the Core of EU Citizenship -- Free movement as emancipation -- Free movement as a recalibration of justice and democracy -- Free movement as separating 'the nation' from 'the state' -- Conclusion -- The Failure of Union Citizenship Beyond the Single Market -- Correcting the nation-state -- Access to social benefits as a test case -- Connecting to the Union as a whole -- State Citizenship, EU Citizenship and Freedom of Movement -- Introduction -- Cosmopolitan statism, EU citizenship and freedom of movement -- De Witte's three arguments -- Conclusion -- Free Movement as a Means of Subject-Formation: Defending a More Relational Approach to EU Citizenship -- Free Movement Emancipates, but What Freedom Is This? -- Free Movement and EU Citizenship from the Perspective of Intra-European Mobility -- The history of free movement and EU citizenship -- The value of EU citizenship is linked with free movement -- Imaginary horizons and cognitive migration -- The New Cleavage Between Mobile and Immobile Europeans -- Whose Freedom of Movement Is Worth Defending?. The Court and the Legislators: Who Should Define the Scope of Free Movement in the EU? -- Introduction -- Free movement as the core of EU citizenship -- Justice, free movement, disagreement, and authority -- How to defend free movement -- Conclusion -- Reading Too Much and Too Little into the Matter? Latent Limits and Potentials of EU Freedom of Movement -- What to Say to Those Who Stay? Free Movement is a Human Right of Universal Value -- The human right to immigrate -- The freedom to stay -- Union Citizenship for UK Citizens -- UK Citizens as Former EU Citizens: Predicament and Remedies -- EU-27 citizens resident in the UK -- UK citizens as former EU citizens -- Automatic/accelerated naturalisation of UK citizens (residing) in other member states -- (Partial) decoupling of Union citizenship from Member State citizenship -- UK citizens as Third Country Nationals -- Ruptures in the legal terrain -- 'Migrants', 'Mobile Citizens' and the Borders of Exclusion in the European Union -- Migrants -- Mobile citizens -- Linking migration and mobility -- EU Citizenship, Free Movement and Emancipation: A Rejoinder -- The exclusionary potential of free movement and Union citizenship -- What Union citizenship and free movement do to the state -- A normative vision for Union citizenship -- Part III:: Should EU Citizenship Be Duty-Free? -- EU Citizenship Needs a Stronger Social Dimension and Soft Duties -- Introduction -- A bit of history -- Enter EU citizenship -- Deactivating the vicious circle by empowering the stayers -- Making EU citizenship more visible and salient -- Adding citizenship duties: Is it desirable? Is it feasible? -- An incremental strategy - with a vision -- Liberal Citizenship Is Duty-Free -- Building Social Europe Requires Challenging the Judicialisation of Citizenship. EU Citizenship Should Speak Both to the Mobile and the Non-Mobile European -- Why free movement for active citizens? -- Why non-discrimination? -- Earned social citizenship -- The Impact and Political Accountability of EU Citizenship -- 'Feed them First, Then Ask Virtue of Them': Broadening and Deepening Freedom of Movement -- Citizenship as an instrument for bonding and integrating -- Broadening and deepening freedom of movement -- The duties of citizenship -- EU Citizenship, Duties and Social Rights -- Why Compensating the 'Stayers' for the Costs of Mobility Is the Wrong Way to Go -- Balancing the Rights of European Citizenship with Duties Towards National Citizens: An Inter-National Perspective -- Grab the Horns of the Dilemma and Ride the Bull -- A European community of destiny -- The DNA of EU citizenship -- Politicising the struggles over EU citizenship -- Why Adding Duties to European Citizenship Is Likely to Increase the Gap Between Europhiles and Eurosceptics -- Enhancing the Visibility of Social Europe: A Practical Agenda for 'The Last Mile' -- An EU Social Card? -- Towards a 'Holding Environment' for Europe's (Diverse) Social Citizenship Regimes -- Imagine: European Union Social Citizenship and Post-Marshallian Rights and Duties -- EU Citizenship is not duty-free -- Why EU citizenship cannot be duty-free -- What kinds of EU citizenship duties and who should be the duty-bearers? -- Looking forward -- Why the Crisis of European Citizenship is a Crisis of European Democracy -- Why social citizenship? -- Countering anti-European politics -- Regaining the Trust of the Stay-at-Homes: Three Strategies -- Two distinctions -- All movers -- Retreat -- Caring Europe -- Duties -- Social Citizenship, Democratic Values and European Integration: A Rejoinder -- Two perspectives on politics: alternative or complementary?. Citizenship, democracy and European integration -- Caring Europe, my proposals and the 'holding environment' -- What about duties? -- Conflicts and visions on the future of Europe. Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources. Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries. Electronic books. Print version: Bauböck, Rainer Debating European Citizenship Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2018 9783319899046 ProQuest (Firm) https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/oeawat/detail.action?docID=5516212 Click to View |
language |
English |
format |
eBook |
author |
Bauböck, Rainer. |
spellingShingle |
Bauböck, Rainer. Debating European Citizenship. IMISCOE Research Series Debating European Citizenship -- Acknowledgements -- Preface -- Contents -- About the editor -- Contributors -- EU citizenship: Still a Fundamental Status? -- Introduction -- Challenges and complexities of EU citizenship -- Europeanisation and de-Europeanisation in EU citizenship -- How far does EU citizenship constrain member state sovereignty in matters of nationality law? -- Can EU citizenship be retained after Brexit? -- Part I:: Should EU Citizens Living in Other Member States Vote There in National Elections? -- EU-Citizens Should Have the Right to Vote in National Elections -- EU Citizens Should Have Voting Rights in National Elections, But in Which Country? -- A European or a National Solution to the Democratic Deficit? -- EU Accession to the ECHR Requires Ensuring the Franchise for EU Citizens in National Elections -- How to Enfranchise Second Country Nationals? Test the Options for Best Fit, Easiest Adoption and Lowest Costs -- What's in a People? Social Facts, Individual Choice, and the European Union -- I. -- II. -- III. -- Testing the Bonds of Solidarity in Europe's Common Citizenship Area -- 'An Ever Closer Union Among the Peoples of Europe': Union Citizenship, Democracy, Rights and the Enfranchisement of Second Country Nationals -- Five Pragmatic Reasons for a Dialogue with and Between Member States on Free Movement and Voting Rights -- Don't Start with Europeans First. An Initiative for Extending Voting Rights Should also Promote Access to Citizenship for Third Country Nationals -- Voting Rights and Beyond… -- One Cannot Promote Free Movement of EU Citizens and Restrict Their Political Participation -- 1) The weight of principles -- 2) Tackling the democratic deficit without the methodological privileging of the state -- 3) The road travelled thus far -- 4) Free movement and EU citizenship are not only about spacing. they are also about timing -- Legal norms should reflect social practices and EU citizens' lived encounters -- Second Country EU Citizens Voting in National Elections Is an Important Step, but Other Steps Should Be Taken First -- A More Comprehensive Reform Is Needed to Ensure That Mobile Citizens Can Vote -- Incremental Changes Are not Enough - Voting Rights Are a Matter of Democratic Principle -- Mobile Union Citizens Should Have Portable Voting Rights Within the EU -- Political rights for mobile Union citizens -- Why naturalisation solves too little too late -- Political rights for Union citizens reloaded? -- Concluding Remarks: Righting Democratic Wrongs -- Part II:: Freedom of Movement Under Attack: Is it Worth Defending as the Core of EU Citizenship? -- Freedom of Movement Needs to Be Defended as the Core of EU Citizenship -- Free movement as emancipation -- Free movement as a recalibration of justice and democracy -- Free movement as separating 'the nation' from 'the state' -- Conclusion -- The Failure of Union Citizenship Beyond the Single Market -- Correcting the nation-state -- Access to social benefits as a test case -- Connecting to the Union as a whole -- State Citizenship, EU Citizenship and Freedom of Movement -- Introduction -- Cosmopolitan statism, EU citizenship and freedom of movement -- De Witte's three arguments -- Conclusion -- Free Movement as a Means of Subject-Formation: Defending a More Relational Approach to EU Citizenship -- Free Movement Emancipates, but What Freedom Is This? -- Free Movement and EU Citizenship from the Perspective of Intra-European Mobility -- The history of free movement and EU citizenship -- The value of EU citizenship is linked with free movement -- Imaginary horizons and cognitive migration -- The New Cleavage Between Mobile and Immobile Europeans -- Whose Freedom of Movement Is Worth Defending?. The Court and the Legislators: Who Should Define the Scope of Free Movement in the EU? -- Introduction -- Free movement as the core of EU citizenship -- Justice, free movement, disagreement, and authority -- How to defend free movement -- Conclusion -- Reading Too Much and Too Little into the Matter? Latent Limits and Potentials of EU Freedom of Movement -- What to Say to Those Who Stay? Free Movement is a Human Right of Universal Value -- The human right to immigrate -- The freedom to stay -- Union Citizenship for UK Citizens -- UK Citizens as Former EU Citizens: Predicament and Remedies -- EU-27 citizens resident in the UK -- UK citizens as former EU citizens -- Automatic/accelerated naturalisation of UK citizens (residing) in other member states -- (Partial) decoupling of Union citizenship from Member State citizenship -- UK citizens as Third Country Nationals -- Ruptures in the legal terrain -- 'Migrants', 'Mobile Citizens' and the Borders of Exclusion in the European Union -- Migrants -- Mobile citizens -- Linking migration and mobility -- EU Citizenship, Free Movement and Emancipation: A Rejoinder -- The exclusionary potential of free movement and Union citizenship -- What Union citizenship and free movement do to the state -- A normative vision for Union citizenship -- Part III:: Should EU Citizenship Be Duty-Free? -- EU Citizenship Needs a Stronger Social Dimension and Soft Duties -- Introduction -- A bit of history -- Enter EU citizenship -- Deactivating the vicious circle by empowering the stayers -- Making EU citizenship more visible and salient -- Adding citizenship duties: Is it desirable? Is it feasible? -- An incremental strategy - with a vision -- Liberal Citizenship Is Duty-Free -- Building Social Europe Requires Challenging the Judicialisation of Citizenship. EU Citizenship Should Speak Both to the Mobile and the Non-Mobile European -- Why free movement for active citizens? -- Why non-discrimination? -- Earned social citizenship -- The Impact and Political Accountability of EU Citizenship -- 'Feed them First, Then Ask Virtue of Them': Broadening and Deepening Freedom of Movement -- Citizenship as an instrument for bonding and integrating -- Broadening and deepening freedom of movement -- The duties of citizenship -- EU Citizenship, Duties and Social Rights -- Why Compensating the 'Stayers' for the Costs of Mobility Is the Wrong Way to Go -- Balancing the Rights of European Citizenship with Duties Towards National Citizens: An Inter-National Perspective -- Grab the Horns of the Dilemma and Ride the Bull -- A European community of destiny -- The DNA of EU citizenship -- Politicising the struggles over EU citizenship -- Why Adding Duties to European Citizenship Is Likely to Increase the Gap Between Europhiles and Eurosceptics -- Enhancing the Visibility of Social Europe: A Practical Agenda for 'The Last Mile' -- An EU Social Card? -- Towards a 'Holding Environment' for Europe's (Diverse) Social Citizenship Regimes -- Imagine: European Union Social Citizenship and Post-Marshallian Rights and Duties -- EU Citizenship is not duty-free -- Why EU citizenship cannot be duty-free -- What kinds of EU citizenship duties and who should be the duty-bearers? -- Looking forward -- Why the Crisis of European Citizenship is a Crisis of European Democracy -- Why social citizenship? -- Countering anti-European politics -- Regaining the Trust of the Stay-at-Homes: Three Strategies -- Two distinctions -- All movers -- Retreat -- Caring Europe -- Duties -- Social Citizenship, Democratic Values and European Integration: A Rejoinder -- Two perspectives on politics: alternative or complementary?. Citizenship, democracy and European integration -- Caring Europe, my proposals and the 'holding environment' -- What about duties? -- Conflicts and visions on the future of Europe. |
author_facet |
Bauböck, Rainer. |
author_variant |
r b rb |
author_sort |
Bauböck, Rainer. |
title |
Debating European Citizenship. |
title_full |
Debating European Citizenship. |
title_fullStr |
Debating European Citizenship. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Debating European Citizenship. |
title_auth |
Debating European Citizenship. |
title_new |
Debating European Citizenship. |
title_sort |
debating european citizenship. |
series |
IMISCOE Research Series |
series2 |
IMISCOE Research Series |
publisher |
Springer International Publishing AG, |
publishDate |
2018 |
physical |
1 online resource (304 pages) |
edition |
1st ed. |
contents |
Debating European Citizenship -- Acknowledgements -- Preface -- Contents -- About the editor -- Contributors -- EU citizenship: Still a Fundamental Status? -- Introduction -- Challenges and complexities of EU citizenship -- Europeanisation and de-Europeanisation in EU citizenship -- How far does EU citizenship constrain member state sovereignty in matters of nationality law? -- Can EU citizenship be retained after Brexit? -- Part I:: Should EU Citizens Living in Other Member States Vote There in National Elections? -- EU-Citizens Should Have the Right to Vote in National Elections -- EU Citizens Should Have Voting Rights in National Elections, But in Which Country? -- A European or a National Solution to the Democratic Deficit? -- EU Accession to the ECHR Requires Ensuring the Franchise for EU Citizens in National Elections -- How to Enfranchise Second Country Nationals? Test the Options for Best Fit, Easiest Adoption and Lowest Costs -- What's in a People? Social Facts, Individual Choice, and the European Union -- I. -- II. -- III. -- Testing the Bonds of Solidarity in Europe's Common Citizenship Area -- 'An Ever Closer Union Among the Peoples of Europe': Union Citizenship, Democracy, Rights and the Enfranchisement of Second Country Nationals -- Five Pragmatic Reasons for a Dialogue with and Between Member States on Free Movement and Voting Rights -- Don't Start with Europeans First. An Initiative for Extending Voting Rights Should also Promote Access to Citizenship for Third Country Nationals -- Voting Rights and Beyond… -- One Cannot Promote Free Movement of EU Citizens and Restrict Their Political Participation -- 1) The weight of principles -- 2) Tackling the democratic deficit without the methodological privileging of the state -- 3) The road travelled thus far -- 4) Free movement and EU citizenship are not only about spacing. they are also about timing -- Legal norms should reflect social practices and EU citizens' lived encounters -- Second Country EU Citizens Voting in National Elections Is an Important Step, but Other Steps Should Be Taken First -- A More Comprehensive Reform Is Needed to Ensure That Mobile Citizens Can Vote -- Incremental Changes Are not Enough - Voting Rights Are a Matter of Democratic Principle -- Mobile Union Citizens Should Have Portable Voting Rights Within the EU -- Political rights for mobile Union citizens -- Why naturalisation solves too little too late -- Political rights for Union citizens reloaded? -- Concluding Remarks: Righting Democratic Wrongs -- Part II:: Freedom of Movement Under Attack: Is it Worth Defending as the Core of EU Citizenship? -- Freedom of Movement Needs to Be Defended as the Core of EU Citizenship -- Free movement as emancipation -- Free movement as a recalibration of justice and democracy -- Free movement as separating 'the nation' from 'the state' -- Conclusion -- The Failure of Union Citizenship Beyond the Single Market -- Correcting the nation-state -- Access to social benefits as a test case -- Connecting to the Union as a whole -- State Citizenship, EU Citizenship and Freedom of Movement -- Introduction -- Cosmopolitan statism, EU citizenship and freedom of movement -- De Witte's three arguments -- Conclusion -- Free Movement as a Means of Subject-Formation: Defending a More Relational Approach to EU Citizenship -- Free Movement Emancipates, but What Freedom Is This? -- Free Movement and EU Citizenship from the Perspective of Intra-European Mobility -- The history of free movement and EU citizenship -- The value of EU citizenship is linked with free movement -- Imaginary horizons and cognitive migration -- The New Cleavage Between Mobile and Immobile Europeans -- Whose Freedom of Movement Is Worth Defending?. The Court and the Legislators: Who Should Define the Scope of Free Movement in the EU? -- Introduction -- Free movement as the core of EU citizenship -- Justice, free movement, disagreement, and authority -- How to defend free movement -- Conclusion -- Reading Too Much and Too Little into the Matter? Latent Limits and Potentials of EU Freedom of Movement -- What to Say to Those Who Stay? Free Movement is a Human Right of Universal Value -- The human right to immigrate -- The freedom to stay -- Union Citizenship for UK Citizens -- UK Citizens as Former EU Citizens: Predicament and Remedies -- EU-27 citizens resident in the UK -- UK citizens as former EU citizens -- Automatic/accelerated naturalisation of UK citizens (residing) in other member states -- (Partial) decoupling of Union citizenship from Member State citizenship -- UK citizens as Third Country Nationals -- Ruptures in the legal terrain -- 'Migrants', 'Mobile Citizens' and the Borders of Exclusion in the European Union -- Migrants -- Mobile citizens -- Linking migration and mobility -- EU Citizenship, Free Movement and Emancipation: A Rejoinder -- The exclusionary potential of free movement and Union citizenship -- What Union citizenship and free movement do to the state -- A normative vision for Union citizenship -- Part III:: Should EU Citizenship Be Duty-Free? -- EU Citizenship Needs a Stronger Social Dimension and Soft Duties -- Introduction -- A bit of history -- Enter EU citizenship -- Deactivating the vicious circle by empowering the stayers -- Making EU citizenship more visible and salient -- Adding citizenship duties: Is it desirable? Is it feasible? -- An incremental strategy - with a vision -- Liberal Citizenship Is Duty-Free -- Building Social Europe Requires Challenging the Judicialisation of Citizenship. EU Citizenship Should Speak Both to the Mobile and the Non-Mobile European -- Why free movement for active citizens? -- Why non-discrimination? -- Earned social citizenship -- The Impact and Political Accountability of EU Citizenship -- 'Feed them First, Then Ask Virtue of Them': Broadening and Deepening Freedom of Movement -- Citizenship as an instrument for bonding and integrating -- Broadening and deepening freedom of movement -- The duties of citizenship -- EU Citizenship, Duties and Social Rights -- Why Compensating the 'Stayers' for the Costs of Mobility Is the Wrong Way to Go -- Balancing the Rights of European Citizenship with Duties Towards National Citizens: An Inter-National Perspective -- Grab the Horns of the Dilemma and Ride the Bull -- A European community of destiny -- The DNA of EU citizenship -- Politicising the struggles over EU citizenship -- Why Adding Duties to European Citizenship Is Likely to Increase the Gap Between Europhiles and Eurosceptics -- Enhancing the Visibility of Social Europe: A Practical Agenda for 'The Last Mile' -- An EU Social Card? -- Towards a 'Holding Environment' for Europe's (Diverse) Social Citizenship Regimes -- Imagine: European Union Social Citizenship and Post-Marshallian Rights and Duties -- EU Citizenship is not duty-free -- Why EU citizenship cannot be duty-free -- What kinds of EU citizenship duties and who should be the duty-bearers? -- Looking forward -- Why the Crisis of European Citizenship is a Crisis of European Democracy -- Why social citizenship? -- Countering anti-European politics -- Regaining the Trust of the Stay-at-Homes: Three Strategies -- Two distinctions -- All movers -- Retreat -- Caring Europe -- Duties -- Social Citizenship, Democratic Values and European Integration: A Rejoinder -- Two perspectives on politics: alternative or complementary?. Citizenship, democracy and European integration -- Caring Europe, my proposals and the 'holding environment' -- What about duties? -- Conflicts and visions on the future of Europe. |
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Test the Options for Best Fit, Easiest Adoption and Lowest Costs -- What's in a People? Social Facts, Individual Choice, and the European Union -- I. -- II. -- III. -- Testing the Bonds of Solidarity in Europe's Common Citizenship Area -- 'An Ever Closer Union Among the Peoples of Europe': Union Citizenship, Democracy, Rights and the Enfranchisement of Second Country Nationals -- Five Pragmatic Reasons for a Dialogue with and Between Member States on Free Movement and Voting Rights -- Don't Start with Europeans First. An Initiative for Extending Voting Rights Should also Promote Access to Citizenship for Third Country Nationals -- Voting Rights and Beyond… -- One Cannot Promote Free Movement of EU Citizens and Restrict Their Political Participation -- 1) The weight of principles -- 2) Tackling the democratic deficit without the methodological privileging of the state -- 3) The road travelled thus far -- 4) Free movement and EU citizenship are not only about spacing.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">they are also about timing -- Legal norms should reflect social practices and EU citizens' lived encounters -- Second Country EU Citizens Voting in National Elections Is an Important Step, but Other Steps Should Be Taken First -- A More Comprehensive Reform Is Needed to Ensure That Mobile Citizens Can Vote -- Incremental Changes Are not Enough - Voting Rights Are a Matter of Democratic Principle -- Mobile Union Citizens Should Have Portable Voting Rights Within the EU -- Political rights for mobile Union citizens -- Why naturalisation solves too little too late -- Political rights for Union citizens reloaded? -- Concluding Remarks: Righting Democratic Wrongs -- Part II:: Freedom of Movement Under Attack: Is it Worth Defending as the Core of EU Citizenship? -- Freedom of Movement Needs to Be Defended as the Core of EU Citizenship -- Free movement as emancipation -- Free movement as a recalibration of justice and democracy -- Free movement as separating 'the nation' from 'the state' -- Conclusion -- The Failure of Union Citizenship Beyond the Single Market -- Correcting the nation-state -- Access to social benefits as a test case -- Connecting to the Union as a whole -- State Citizenship, EU Citizenship and Freedom of Movement -- Introduction -- Cosmopolitan statism, EU citizenship and freedom of movement -- De Witte's three arguments -- Conclusion -- Free Movement as a Means of Subject-Formation: Defending a More Relational Approach to EU Citizenship -- Free Movement Emancipates, but What Freedom Is This? -- Free Movement and EU Citizenship from the Perspective of Intra-European Mobility -- The history of free movement and EU citizenship -- The value of EU citizenship is linked with free movement -- Imaginary horizons and cognitive migration -- The New Cleavage Between Mobile and Immobile Europeans -- Whose Freedom of Movement Is Worth Defending?.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">The Court and the Legislators: Who Should Define the Scope of Free Movement in the EU? -- Introduction -- Free movement as the core of EU citizenship -- Justice, free movement, disagreement, and authority -- How to defend free movement -- Conclusion -- Reading Too Much and Too Little into the Matter? Latent Limits and Potentials of EU Freedom of Movement -- What to Say to Those Who Stay? Free Movement is a Human Right of Universal Value -- The human right to immigrate -- The freedom to stay -- Union Citizenship for UK Citizens -- UK Citizens as Former EU Citizens: Predicament and Remedies -- EU-27 citizens resident in the UK -- UK citizens as former EU citizens -- Automatic/accelerated naturalisation of UK citizens (residing) in other member states -- (Partial) decoupling of Union citizenship from Member State citizenship -- UK citizens as Third Country Nationals -- Ruptures in the legal terrain -- 'Migrants', 'Mobile Citizens' and the Borders of Exclusion in the European Union -- Migrants -- Mobile citizens -- Linking migration and mobility -- EU Citizenship, Free Movement and Emancipation: A Rejoinder -- The exclusionary potential of free movement and Union citizenship -- What Union citizenship and free movement do to the state -- A normative vision for Union citizenship -- Part III:: Should EU Citizenship Be Duty-Free? -- EU Citizenship Needs a Stronger Social Dimension and Soft Duties -- Introduction -- A bit of history -- Enter EU citizenship -- Deactivating the vicious circle by empowering the stayers -- Making EU citizenship more visible and salient -- Adding citizenship duties: Is it desirable? Is it feasible? -- An incremental strategy - with a vision -- Liberal Citizenship Is Duty-Free -- Building Social Europe Requires Challenging the Judicialisation of Citizenship.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">EU Citizenship Should Speak Both to the Mobile and the Non-Mobile European -- Why free movement for active citizens? -- Why non-discrimination? -- Earned social citizenship -- The Impact and Political Accountability of EU Citizenship -- 'Feed them First, Then Ask Virtue of Them': Broadening and Deepening Freedom of Movement -- Citizenship as an instrument for bonding and integrating -- Broadening and deepening freedom of movement -- The duties of citizenship -- EU Citizenship, Duties and Social Rights -- Why Compensating the 'Stayers' for the Costs of Mobility Is the Wrong Way to Go -- Balancing the Rights of European Citizenship with Duties Towards National Citizens: An Inter-National Perspective -- Grab the Horns of the Dilemma and Ride the Bull -- A European community of destiny -- The DNA of EU citizenship -- Politicising the struggles over EU citizenship -- Why Adding Duties to European Citizenship Is Likely to Increase the Gap Between Europhiles and Eurosceptics -- Enhancing the Visibility of Social Europe: A Practical Agenda for 'The Last Mile' -- An EU Social Card? -- Towards a 'Holding Environment' for Europe's (Diverse) Social Citizenship Regimes -- Imagine: European Union Social Citizenship and Post-Marshallian Rights and Duties -- EU Citizenship is not duty-free -- Why EU citizenship cannot be duty-free -- What kinds of EU citizenship duties and who should be the duty-bearers? -- Looking forward -- Why the Crisis of European Citizenship is a Crisis of European Democracy -- Why social citizenship? -- Countering anti-European politics -- Regaining the Trust of the Stay-at-Homes: Three Strategies -- Two distinctions -- All movers -- Retreat -- Caring Europe -- Duties -- Social Citizenship, Democratic Values and European Integration: A Rejoinder -- Two perspectives on politics: alternative or complementary?.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Citizenship, democracy and European integration -- Caring Europe, my proposals and the 'holding environment' -- What about duties? -- Conflicts and visions on the future of Europe.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="588" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="590" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries. </subfield></datafield><datafield tag="655" ind1=" " ind2="4"><subfield code="a">Electronic books.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="776" ind1="0" ind2="8"><subfield code="i">Print version:</subfield><subfield code="a">Bauböck, Rainer</subfield><subfield code="t">Debating European Citizenship</subfield><subfield code="d">Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2018</subfield><subfield code="z">9783319899046</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="797" ind1="2" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">ProQuest (Firm)</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="830" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield code="a">IMISCOE Research Series</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="856" ind1="4" ind2="0"><subfield code="u">https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/oeawat/detail.action?docID=5516212</subfield><subfield code="z">Click to View</subfield></datafield></record></collection> |