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This paper deals with loss of citizenship of the European Union (EU) due to the loss of nationality of an EU member state. Only the nationals of a member state possess European citizenship; the loss of nationality of a member state thus also implies the loss of European citizenship. Member states are in principle autonomous in nationality matters, which means that their rules on loss of nationality, and loss of EU citizenship, differ considerably. But member states must respect international law and the general principles of European law when dealing with loss of nationality. This report aims to provide a comprehensive and systematic comparative analysis of existing regulations and procedures in EU member states with regard to the involuntary loss of nationality. These rules are also assessed in light of international and European standards, in particular with regard to the prevention of arbitrary deprivation of nationality, the principle of proportionality and procedural guarantees. The report offers recommendations for policy-makers, judges and other authorities dealing with this issue.
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Statistics can provide a useful perspective when assessing the practical relevance of varying rules and practices on the involuntary loss of nationality across EU Member States. Yet while much progress has been made in the EU in recent years with regard to the collection of comparable and reliable information on the acquisition of nationality, statistics on the loss of nationality are hard to find and, where available, difficult to interpret.In this comparative report, the authors explore the landscape of existing statistical data on loss of nationality in the European Union. The report identifies challenges to the existing methods of data collection and data interpretation and introduces an online statistical database, bringing together all existing statistical data on loss of nationality in the EU.
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Statelessness --- Citizenship --- Citizenship. --- Statelessness.
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Statelessness --- Citizenship --- Citizenship. --- Statelessness.
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"As nationalism rages and displacement proliferates, the plight of people rendered stateless by law is both understudied and ever more urgent. In Ghost Citizens Legal scholar Jamie Chai Yun Liew explores what it means to be stateless as a shattering legal condition, a lived experience and arena of powerful struggle for genuine justice. Told through an examination of legal processes and vivid personal accounts of stateless life, Liew offers a bold and unique approach to understanding a global experience and a double oppression: of being invisible and feared in law. By tracing British colonial legal vestiges in the case study of Malaysia, Ghost Citizens shows how contemporary juridical states deploy legal and historical ideas of racial categories to create and maintain statelessness. This book challenges established norms of state recognition and calls for a discussion of new ideas, borrowed from other areas of law including Indigenous legal traditions and family law, about how we should organize our communities with more respectful relations and treatment among kin."--
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Promoting Citizenship and Preventing Statelessness in South Africa: A Practitioner's Guide Edited by Lawyers for Human Rights 2014 ISSN: 978-1-920538-30-9 Pages: 152 Print version: Available Electronic version: Free PDF available
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Aliens --- Political refugees. --- Statelessness.
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Promoting Citizenship and Preventing Statelessness in South Africa: A Practitioner's Guide Edited by Lawyers for Human Rights 2014 ISSN: 978-1-920538-30-9 Pages: 152 Print version: Available Electronic version: Free PDF available
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