The civic citizens of Europe : the legal potential for immigrant integration in the EU, Belgium, Germany, and the United Kingdom

Author(s)

    • Jesse, Moritz

Bibliographic Information

The civic citizens of Europe : the legal potential for immigrant integration in the EU, Belgium, Germany, and the United Kingdom

by Moritz Jesse

(Nijhoff studies in European Union law, v. 11)

Brill Nijhoff, c2017

  • : hardback

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [363]-403) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In this work Moritz Jesse analyses the legal framework within which inclusion of immigrants into the receiving societies can take place. The inclusion of immigrants cannot be enforced by law. However, legislation must provide the room within which integration can take place legally. By studying residence titles, procedures and other sources in a comparative and critical way, Jesse wants to discover whether the legal potential for integration in the EU and the three Member States is sufficient for the inclusion of immigrants.

Table of Contents

  • Acknowledgments List of Tables and Figure 1 Immigrant Integration as a Historic Challenge 1.1 Immigrant Integration as a Historic Challenge 1.2 Objective, Hypothesis, Methodology & Structure of This Book 2 Immigrant Integration and Civic Citizenship 2.1 A Legal Definition of Immigrant Integration 2.2 A Legal Definition of Civic Citizenship 2.3 Dimensions of Citizenship and Immigrant Integration 3 Immigration Facts and Immigration Governance in the Case Studies 3.1 Immigration and Integration in Numbers 3.2 Migration History, Current Situation and Discourse in the Case Studies 3.3 Locating Rights and Competences for Migration 3.4 Available Residence Permits in EU and National Legislation 4 Common Rules and Non-discrimination 4.1 Acquisition of Residence Titles 4.2 Losing Residence Titles 4.3 Enjoying Residence (Titles): Equal Treatment and Non-discrimination 5 Employment and Occupation 5.1 Categories, Markers, and Applicable Legislation 5.2 Citizens of the Union 5.3 Turkish Nationals 5.4 Non-economic Immigrants from Third Countries 5.5 Economic Immigrants from Third Countries 5.6 Conclusions: Employment and Occupation 6 Researchers and Students 6.1 Researchers 6.2 Students 6.3 Conclusions: Researchers and Students 7 Family Life 7.1 Applicable Legislation 7.2 The Right to Family Life under Article 8 ECHR and Article 7 Charter 7.3 EU Law 7.4 National Legislation 7.5 Conclusions: Similar but Distinguishable Rights to Family Life 8 Permanent Residence Permits 8.1 EU Law 8.2 National Legislation 8.3 Conclusions: Permanent Residence Statuses 9 The (Legal) Value of Integration Measures 9.1 Mandatory Civic Integration Measures and Integration Conditions 9.2 Other EU Immigrant Integration Measures and Initiatives 9.3 Conclusions: Nature and Purpose of Integration Trajectories 10 Conclusions: Immigrant Integration and Civic Citizenship 10.1 The Legal Potential for Integration 10.2 Civic Citizenship for Third-Country Nationals in the European Union 10.3 (Guessing) Future Developments 10.4 Concluding Remarks Bibliography
  • Index.

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