Download - Access to Citizenship European Trends and Comparative Approaches

Transcript
Page 1: Access to Citizenship  European Trends and Comparative Approaches

Access to Citizenship

European Trends and Comparative Approaches

Maarten Vink ICS-UL

ENCONTRO COM A CIÊNCIA 2009

Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, 29 e 30 de Julho de 2009

Page 2: Access to Citizenship  European Trends and Comparative Approaches

Project

• Research Question: what explains the different ways in which states attribute citizenship?

• Relevance: access to citizenship is of essential importance for political incorporation of immigrants

• Analysis: citizenship laws in 30 developed democracies from 1985 to 2009

• Method: comparative configurational analysis (CCA)

Page 3: Access to Citizenship  European Trends and Comparative Approaches

Limits to Comparative Research

• Different state-building processes

– Consolidated vs. fragile states

• Different citizenship traditions

– Ius soli vs. ius sanguinis

• Different migration experiences

– Emigration vs. immigration

• Different political contexts

– E.g. left-wing vs. populist parties

Page 4: Access to Citizenship  European Trends and Comparative Approaches

Trends 1: Discursive changes

• Instrumentalization– Since 1980s– Citizenship policies as ‘integration’ policies– Elite-driven

• Politicization– Since 1990s– Citizenship policies as ‘identity’ policies– Society-driven

Page 5: Access to Citizenship  European Trends and Comparative Approaches

Trends 2: Substantive changes

1. Equal treatment men / women (ius sanguinis)

2. Inclusion 2nd and/or 3rd generation (ius soli)

3. Acceptance of multiple citizenship

4. Introduction of ´integration´ conditions

5. Deprivation of citizenship (fraud / crime)

6. European Union membership

Vink, M., ed. (2010). Migration and Citizenship Attribution: Politics and Policies in Western Europe. Special issue of Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 36(4).

Page 6: Access to Citizenship  European Trends and Comparative Approaches

3. Increasing acceptance of multiple citizenship

increasing occurrence of multiple citizenship due to migration and mixed marriages

question: why do some states recognize multiple citizenship as a reality, while others do not?

Page 7: Access to Citizenship  European Trends and Comparative Approaches

Explanations

• Legal tradition (Weil, 2001)– Common vs. Civil law?

• Colonialism (Howard, 2006)– Former colonial power (1945)?

• Left-wing governments (Joppke, 2005)– No. of years largest gov. party is left 1990-2003

• Presence of populist parties (Howard, 2006)– Max. electoral support 1990-2003

Page 8: Access to Citizenship  European Trends and Comparative Approaches

Comparative Configurational Analysis

Charles Ragin1987. The Comparative Method2000. Fuzzy-set social science

Calibration:- Crisp-set (0/1) - Fuzzy-set (0-1)

No ´independent´ variablesNo linear regression Necessary and sufficient conditions (or combinations)

Page 9: Access to Citizenship  European Trends and Comparative Approaches

Citizenship Configurations (2009)

Page 10: Access to Citizenship  European Trends and Comparative Approaches

Conclusions

• No single European model

• Citizenship attribution in flux

• Citizenship policies explained by:– legal tradition

• common law vs. civil law

– colonial experience– ideological factors

• absence / presence of strong populist parties(rather than absence / presence of strong leftwing parties)

Page 11: Access to Citizenship  European Trends and Comparative Approaches

• Online observatory• 33+ countries• Comprehensive

comparative grid– Laws / Case law– Country reports– Comparative tables– Statistics

• Launch Fall 2009 • Funded by EC

eudo-citizenship.eu