Transnational citizenship in the European Union: past, present, and future
Material type:
- 9781628926798
- 323.6094 O5T7
Item type | Current library | Item location | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Vikram Sarabhai Library | Rack 12-B / Slot 503 (0 Floor, West Wing) | Non-fiction | General Stacks | 323.6094 O5T7 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 193163 |
Table of content
Citizenship: European, National, or In-Between?
Path Dependence and Critical Junctures of European Citizenship
A Note on Methods
Outline of the Book
1.The Founding Decades
Integrating Coal and Steel Markets: Whither Citizenship?
The Treaty of Rome: The Market Citizen Appears
ECJ: Raising the Stakes on European Rights
Free Movement Legislation: From Principles to Policy
Conclusion
2.Bringing Identity, Rights, and Elections In
Paris, Copenhagen, Paris: Visions of Political Union and European Identity
Passport Union
Special Rights for Europeans
A European Electorate
The Tindemans Report: Citizenship Already Out of Vogue?
3.The European Parliament and the Spinelli Project
"The Crocodile Club"
The Committee on Institutional Affairs
The Draft Treaty on European Union: The EP as a "Constituent Assembly"
4.Europe of "No Borders"
"A People's Europe"
Contents note continued: The Single European Act: Explicit Citizenship Politics Brought to a Halt
The Schengen Agreement: Borderless Europe, (Trans)national Citizenship
Free Movement Legislation: Residence Rights Back in Play
5.The Maastricht Process
From Amending the SEA to Achieving Political Union
Negotiating Union: Citizenship and Democratic Legitimacy
Union Citizenship: The Fundamentals of Explicit Citizenship in the EU
6.The Years In-Between: From Maastricht to Constitutional Projects
Post-Maastricht Politics: The "Meaning" of European Citizenship
Amsterdam Treaty: The Circle Was Complete
Nationality, Rights, and the "Internal" Character of Citizenship
The Charter of Fundamental Rights: Not So "Fundamental" After All?
7.The Convention on the Future of Europe and Its Aftermath
The "Listening" Phase: Setting the Constitutional Stage
Contents note continued: The "Deliberating" Phase: Rights, Dual Citizenship, and Values
The "Drafting" Phase: Consolidation Once More
The "Mourning" Phase: Constitutional Failure and Citizenship
8.European Projects, Resilience of the "National," and Citizenship in the EU
The Mirage of Transcending the Nation-State
Failed Reform Proposals and Resilience of the "National"
New Horizons: European Crises and ECJ Activism
Implications of Studying Transnational Citizenship
Conclusions, Questions, and Challenges
The Argument Summarized
Unanswered Issues and Prospects for Future Research
The Future of European Citizenship.
This book argues that European citizenship is transnational, a status that has emerged incrementally during the European integration process. Transnational Citizenship in the European Union follows an institutionalist approach and traces the development of citizenship discourse from the founding treaties of the EU to the most recent effort of constitution-making and the Lisbon Treaty. This helps demonstrate that such discourse has followed a path based on the foundational principles of free movement and non-discrimination rather than revolutionary ideas of a postnational citizenship beyond th.
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