The Human Right to Citizenship: Situating the Right to Citizenship Within International and Regional Human Rights Law
This book provides an in-depth analysis of the scope and content of the right to citizenship in international human rights law and argues for a rights-based interpretation of the right to citizenship based on the principle of jus nexi
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Boston
BRILL
2022
|
Ausgabe: | 1st ed |
Schriftenreihe: | International Refugee Law Series
v.21 |
Online-Zugang: | DE-2070s |
Zusammenfassung: | This book provides an in-depth analysis of the scope and content of the right to citizenship in international human rights law and argues for a rights-based interpretation of the right to citizenship based on the principle of jus nexi |
Beschreibung: | Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (477 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9789004517523 |
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505 | 8 | |a Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- List of Tables -- Abbreviations -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- i Citizenship and International Migration - Setting the Problem -- ii Objective, Scope and Delimitation -- iii Approach and Outlook -- Chapter 2 Citizenship and Nationality: Terms, Concepts and Rights -- i Citizenship or Nationality? A Note on Terminology -- ii The Concept of Citizenship -- 1 Historical Traces of the Concept of Citizenship -- 2 Theoretical Conceptualizations of Citizenship -- 3 Citizenship as a Legal Status -- 3.1 The Concept of Citizenship in International Law -- 3.2 Acquisition and Loss of Citizenship -- 3.3 Functions of Citizenship -- 3.3.1 Diplomatic Protection -- 3.3.2 Political Rights -- 3.3.3 Right to Enter and Remain -- iii Citizenship as a Human Right -- 1 Citizenship as Access to (Human) Rights -- 2 Citizenship as a Moral Human Right -- 2.1 Hannah Arendt's Right to Have Rights -- 2.2 Seyla Benhabib's Cosmopolitan Right to Membership -- 2.3 Ruth Rubio-Marín's Jus Domicilii -- 2.4 Joseph Carens' Theory of Social Membership -- 2.5 Ayelet Shachar's Jus Nexi -- 2.6 David Owen's Right to a Nationality -- 3 Citizenship as a Legal Human Right -- Chapter 3 Domaine Réservé?: Statehood, Sovereignty and Nationality -- i Statehood and Sovereignty in International Law -- 1 Elements of Statehood -- 2 Statehood and Sovereignty -- 3 State Sovereignty and the Doctrine of Domaine Réservé -- ii The Traditional Perception of Nationality as a Domaine Réservé and Its Development -- iii A Historical Perspective on the Regulation of Nationality in International Law -- 1 Early Multilateral Regulation: Avoiding Conflicts -- 2 Internationalization and Specialization: The 1930 Hague Convention -- 3 The After-War Period: The Rise of Individual Rights | |
505 | 8 | |a 4 The Parallel Development: The Indirect Regulation of Nationality -- iv Conclusion: Growing International Support -- Chapter 4 Beyond Sovereignty: The Right to Nationality in International Law -- i Article 15 Universal Declaration of Human Rights -- 1 The Drafting History of Article 15 udhr -- 2 The Scope and Content of Article 15 udhr -- 3 The Customary Nature of Article 15 udhr -- ii The Right to Nationality in International Law -- 1 The Right to Nationality at Universal Level -- 1.1 The UN Core Human Rights Treaties -- 1.1.1 Article 24(3) International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights -- 1.1.2 Article 7 and 8 Convention on the Rights of the Child -- 1.1.3 Article 29 Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families -- 1.1.4 Article 9 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women -- 1.1.5 Article 5 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination -- 1.1.6 Article 18 Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities -- 1.2 The Statelessness Conventions and the Refugee Convention -- 1.2.1 The Convention Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons -- 1.2.2 The Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness -- 1.2.3 The Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees -- 1.3 Soft Law Instruments at Universal Level -- 1.3.1 Resolutions by UN Bodies -- 1.3.1.1 The UN General Assembly -- 1.3.1.2 The UN Human Rights Council -- 1.3.1.3 The Global Compacts on Migration and Refugees -- 1.3.2 Draft Articles of the International Law Commission -- 2 The Right to Nationality at Regional Level -- 2.1 The Americas -- 2.2 Europe -- 2.2.1 Council of Europe -- 2.2.1.1 European Convention on Nationality -- 2.2.1.2 European Convention on Human Rights -- 2.2.1.3 Other Council of Europe Instruments -- A Convention on the Reduction of Cases of Multiple Nationality | |
505 | 8 | |a B Convention on the Avoidance of Statelessness in Relation to State Succession -- C Resolutions and Recommendations of Council of Europe Bodies -- 2.2.2 Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe -- 2.2.3 European Union -- 2.3 Africa -- 2.3.1 African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights -- 2.3.2 Draft Protocol on the Specific Aspects of the Right to a Nationality and the Eradication of Statelessness in Africa -- 2.3.3 African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child -- 2.4 Middle East and North Africa -- 2.4.1 Arab Charter on Human Rights -- 2.4.2 Covenant on the Rights of the Child in Islam -- 2.5 Asia and Pacific -- 2.6 Interim Conclusion -- iii The Right to Nationality as Customary International Law? -- iv Conclusion: The Body of International Human Rights Law -- Chapter 5 Defining the Right to Nationality: Rights and Obligations -- i Qualifying the Right to Nationality -- ii The Scope of the Right to Nationality -- 1 Personal Scope of Application -- 1.1 Everyone -- 1.2 Instruments with a Limited Personal Scope -- 1.3 Legal Persons? -- 2 Substantive Scope of Application -- 2.1 Nationality -- 2.2 Acquisition, Change and Loss of Nationality -- 3 Territorial Scope of Application -- 4 Temporal Scope of Application -- iii Rights and Obligations Derived from the Right to Nationality -- 1 Negative and Positive Obligations -- 2 Transversal Obligations -- 2.1 Prohibition of Discrimination -- 2.1.1 Discrimination in the Context of Acquisition, Change and Loss of Nationality -- 2.1.2 Discrimination on the Basis of Nationality -- 2.2 The Prohibition of Arbitrariness and the Question of Proportionality -- 2.3 The Duty to Prevent and Reduce Statelessness -- 3 Obligations Regarding the Acquisition of Nationality -- 3.1 Right of the Child to Acquire a Nationality -- 3.2 Acquisition of Nationality by Stateless Persons and Refugees | |
505 | 8 | |a 3.3 Acquisition in Situations of State Succession -- 3.4 Prohibition of Extraterritorial Naturalizations -- 3.5 Prohibition of Forced Naturalization -- 3.6 Right to Naturalization -- 4 Obligations Regarding the Effective Enjoyment of Nationality -- 5 Obligations Regarding Change of Nationality -- 5.1 The Right to Change One's Nationality -- 5.2 The Right to Renounce One's Nationality -- 5.3 A Right to Dual or Multiple Nationality? -- 6 Obligations Regarding Involuntary Loss of Nationality -- 6.1 The Prohibition of Arbitrary Deprivation of Nationality -- 6.1.1 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality on Discriminatory Grounds -- 6.1.2 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality Resulting in Statelessness? -- 6.1.3 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality for the Sole Purpose of Expulsion -- 6.2 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality of Children -- 6.3 Prohibition of Mass Deprivation of Nationality -- 7 Obligations Regarding the Procedure -- 7.1 Access to the Procedure -- 7.2 Due Process -- 7.3 Right to Review -- iv Lawful Interference with the Right to Nationality? -- 1 Legality of Interference -- 2 Legitimacy of Interference -- 3 Balancing of Interests -- v Enforceability and Implementation of the Right to Nationality -- vi Conclusion: Identifiable and Predictable Rights and Obligations -- Chapter 6 An Individual Right: Realizing the Right to Citizenship -- i The Need to Strengthen the Right to Citizenship -- 1 The Limitations of Birthright-Based Modes of Citizenship Acquisition -- 2 The Claim for Political Participation and Representation -- 3 The Exclusionary Effects of Citizenship -- 4 The Individual Rights' Dimension -- ii Jus Nexi - a Genuine-Connection Principle for Citizenship Acquisition -- 1 Theoretical Foundations of the Concept of Jus Nexi -- 2 From 'Private Life' and 'One's Own Country' to Jus Nexi | |
505 | 8 | |a 2.1 The Right to Private Life and the Concept of Social Identity -- 2.2 The Right to Enter One's Own Country -- 3 Connecting Factors for a Jus Nexi -- 3.1 Territorial Ties -- 3.1.1 Residence -- 3.1.2 Birth in the Territory -- 3.1.3 Protection -- 3.2 Familial Ties -- 3.2.1 Family Ties -- 3.2.2 Descent -- 3.2.3 Childhood and Adolescence -- 3.3 Social, Professional, Cultural or Political Ties -- 4 A Dynamic and Non-exclusive Concept -- iii Linking Jus Nexi and the Right to Citizenship -- iv The Implications of a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- 1 Scope of a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- 2 Content of a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- 2.1 The Right to Acquire Citizenship at Birth -- 2.2 The Right to the Citizenship of a Specific State -- 2.3 The Right to Dual and Multiple Citizenship -- 2.4 Limitations upon Involuntary Loss of Citizenship -- 3 Legitimate Interferences - Balancing a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- v Conclusion: Strengthening the Right to Citizenship -- Chapter 7 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Table of Other Materials -- Table of Cases -- Universal and Regional Bodies -- Permanent Court of International Justice/International Court of Justice -- African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights/African Court of Human and Peoples' Rights -- African Committee of Experts on the Rights and Welfare of the Child -- Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women -- Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination -- Committee on the Rights of the Child -- Court of Justice of the European Union -- Eritrea Ethiopia Claims Commission -- European Court of Human Rights/ European Commission of Human Rights -- Human Rights Committee -- Inter-American Court of Human Rights -- International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes -- Iran-United States Claims Tribunal | |
505 | 8 | |a Italy and United States Conciliation Commission | |
520 | |a This book provides an in-depth analysis of the scope and content of the right to citizenship in international human rights law and argues for a rights-based interpretation of the right to citizenship based on the principle of jus nexi | ||
776 | 0 | 8 | |i Erscheint auch als |n Druck-Ausgabe |a von Rütte, Barbara |t The Human Right to Citizenship |d Boston : BRILL,c2022 |z 9789004517516 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | |
any_adam_object | |
author | von Rütte, Barbara |
author_facet | von Rütte, Barbara |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | von Rütte, Barbara |
author_variant | r b v rb rbv |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV049873892 |
collection | ZDB-30-PQE |
contents | Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- List of Tables -- Abbreviations -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- i Citizenship and International Migration - Setting the Problem -- ii Objective, Scope and Delimitation -- iii Approach and Outlook -- Chapter 2 Citizenship and Nationality: Terms, Concepts and Rights -- i Citizenship or Nationality? A Note on Terminology -- ii The Concept of Citizenship -- 1 Historical Traces of the Concept of Citizenship -- 2 Theoretical Conceptualizations of Citizenship -- 3 Citizenship as a Legal Status -- 3.1 The Concept of Citizenship in International Law -- 3.2 Acquisition and Loss of Citizenship -- 3.3 Functions of Citizenship -- 3.3.1 Diplomatic Protection -- 3.3.2 Political Rights -- 3.3.3 Right to Enter and Remain -- iii Citizenship as a Human Right -- 1 Citizenship as Access to (Human) Rights -- 2 Citizenship as a Moral Human Right -- 2.1 Hannah Arendt's Right to Have Rights -- 2.2 Seyla Benhabib's Cosmopolitan Right to Membership -- 2.3 Ruth Rubio-Marín's Jus Domicilii -- 2.4 Joseph Carens' Theory of Social Membership -- 2.5 Ayelet Shachar's Jus Nexi -- 2.6 David Owen's Right to a Nationality -- 3 Citizenship as a Legal Human Right -- Chapter 3 Domaine Réservé?: Statehood, Sovereignty and Nationality -- i Statehood and Sovereignty in International Law -- 1 Elements of Statehood -- 2 Statehood and Sovereignty -- 3 State Sovereignty and the Doctrine of Domaine Réservé -- ii The Traditional Perception of Nationality as a Domaine Réservé and Its Development -- iii A Historical Perspective on the Regulation of Nationality in International Law -- 1 Early Multilateral Regulation: Avoiding Conflicts -- 2 Internationalization and Specialization: The 1930 Hague Convention -- 3 The After-War Period: The Rise of Individual Rights 4 The Parallel Development: The Indirect Regulation of Nationality -- iv Conclusion: Growing International Support -- Chapter 4 Beyond Sovereignty: The Right to Nationality in International Law -- i Article 15 Universal Declaration of Human Rights -- 1 The Drafting History of Article 15 udhr -- 2 The Scope and Content of Article 15 udhr -- 3 The Customary Nature of Article 15 udhr -- ii The Right to Nationality in International Law -- 1 The Right to Nationality at Universal Level -- 1.1 The UN Core Human Rights Treaties -- 1.1.1 Article 24(3) International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights -- 1.1.2 Article 7 and 8 Convention on the Rights of the Child -- 1.1.3 Article 29 Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families -- 1.1.4 Article 9 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women -- 1.1.5 Article 5 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination -- 1.1.6 Article 18 Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities -- 1.2 The Statelessness Conventions and the Refugee Convention -- 1.2.1 The Convention Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons -- 1.2.2 The Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness -- 1.2.3 The Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees -- 1.3 Soft Law Instruments at Universal Level -- 1.3.1 Resolutions by UN Bodies -- 1.3.1.1 The UN General Assembly -- 1.3.1.2 The UN Human Rights Council -- 1.3.1.3 The Global Compacts on Migration and Refugees -- 1.3.2 Draft Articles of the International Law Commission -- 2 The Right to Nationality at Regional Level -- 2.1 The Americas -- 2.2 Europe -- 2.2.1 Council of Europe -- 2.2.1.1 European Convention on Nationality -- 2.2.1.2 European Convention on Human Rights -- 2.2.1.3 Other Council of Europe Instruments -- A Convention on the Reduction of Cases of Multiple Nationality B Convention on the Avoidance of Statelessness in Relation to State Succession -- C Resolutions and Recommendations of Council of Europe Bodies -- 2.2.2 Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe -- 2.2.3 European Union -- 2.3 Africa -- 2.3.1 African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights -- 2.3.2 Draft Protocol on the Specific Aspects of the Right to a Nationality and the Eradication of Statelessness in Africa -- 2.3.3 African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child -- 2.4 Middle East and North Africa -- 2.4.1 Arab Charter on Human Rights -- 2.4.2 Covenant on the Rights of the Child in Islam -- 2.5 Asia and Pacific -- 2.6 Interim Conclusion -- iii The Right to Nationality as Customary International Law? -- iv Conclusion: The Body of International Human Rights Law -- Chapter 5 Defining the Right to Nationality: Rights and Obligations -- i Qualifying the Right to Nationality -- ii The Scope of the Right to Nationality -- 1 Personal Scope of Application -- 1.1 Everyone -- 1.2 Instruments with a Limited Personal Scope -- 1.3 Legal Persons? -- 2 Substantive Scope of Application -- 2.1 Nationality -- 2.2 Acquisition, Change and Loss of Nationality -- 3 Territorial Scope of Application -- 4 Temporal Scope of Application -- iii Rights and Obligations Derived from the Right to Nationality -- 1 Negative and Positive Obligations -- 2 Transversal Obligations -- 2.1 Prohibition of Discrimination -- 2.1.1 Discrimination in the Context of Acquisition, Change and Loss of Nationality -- 2.1.2 Discrimination on the Basis of Nationality -- 2.2 The Prohibition of Arbitrariness and the Question of Proportionality -- 2.3 The Duty to Prevent and Reduce Statelessness -- 3 Obligations Regarding the Acquisition of Nationality -- 3.1 Right of the Child to Acquire a Nationality -- 3.2 Acquisition of Nationality by Stateless Persons and Refugees 3.3 Acquisition in Situations of State Succession -- 3.4 Prohibition of Extraterritorial Naturalizations -- 3.5 Prohibition of Forced Naturalization -- 3.6 Right to Naturalization -- 4 Obligations Regarding the Effective Enjoyment of Nationality -- 5 Obligations Regarding Change of Nationality -- 5.1 The Right to Change One's Nationality -- 5.2 The Right to Renounce One's Nationality -- 5.3 A Right to Dual or Multiple Nationality? -- 6 Obligations Regarding Involuntary Loss of Nationality -- 6.1 The Prohibition of Arbitrary Deprivation of Nationality -- 6.1.1 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality on Discriminatory Grounds -- 6.1.2 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality Resulting in Statelessness? -- 6.1.3 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality for the Sole Purpose of Expulsion -- 6.2 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality of Children -- 6.3 Prohibition of Mass Deprivation of Nationality -- 7 Obligations Regarding the Procedure -- 7.1 Access to the Procedure -- 7.2 Due Process -- 7.3 Right to Review -- iv Lawful Interference with the Right to Nationality? -- 1 Legality of Interference -- 2 Legitimacy of Interference -- 3 Balancing of Interests -- v Enforceability and Implementation of the Right to Nationality -- vi Conclusion: Identifiable and Predictable Rights and Obligations -- Chapter 6 An Individual Right: Realizing the Right to Citizenship -- i The Need to Strengthen the Right to Citizenship -- 1 The Limitations of Birthright-Based Modes of Citizenship Acquisition -- 2 The Claim for Political Participation and Representation -- 3 The Exclusionary Effects of Citizenship -- 4 The Individual Rights' Dimension -- ii Jus Nexi - a Genuine-Connection Principle for Citizenship Acquisition -- 1 Theoretical Foundations of the Concept of Jus Nexi -- 2 From 'Private Life' and 'One's Own Country' to Jus Nexi 2.1 The Right to Private Life and the Concept of Social Identity -- 2.2 The Right to Enter One's Own Country -- 3 Connecting Factors for a Jus Nexi -- 3.1 Territorial Ties -- 3.1.1 Residence -- 3.1.2 Birth in the Territory -- 3.1.3 Protection -- 3.2 Familial Ties -- 3.2.1 Family Ties -- 3.2.2 Descent -- 3.2.3 Childhood and Adolescence -- 3.3 Social, Professional, Cultural or Political Ties -- 4 A Dynamic and Non-exclusive Concept -- iii Linking Jus Nexi and the Right to Citizenship -- iv The Implications of a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- 1 Scope of a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- 2 Content of a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- 2.1 The Right to Acquire Citizenship at Birth -- 2.2 The Right to the Citizenship of a Specific State -- 2.3 The Right to Dual and Multiple Citizenship -- 2.4 Limitations upon Involuntary Loss of Citizenship -- 3 Legitimate Interferences - Balancing a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- v Conclusion: Strengthening the Right to Citizenship -- Chapter 7 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Table of Other Materials -- Table of Cases -- Universal and Regional Bodies -- Permanent Court of International Justice/International Court of Justice -- African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights/African Court of Human and Peoples' Rights -- African Committee of Experts on the Rights and Welfare of the Child -- Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women -- Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination -- Committee on the Rights of the Child -- Court of Justice of the European Union -- Eritrea Ethiopia Claims Commission -- European Court of Human Rights/ European Commission of Human Rights -- Human Rights Committee -- Inter-American Court of Human Rights -- International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes -- Iran-United States Claims Tribunal Italy and United States Conciliation Commission |
ctrlnum | (ZDB-30-PQE)EBC31216965 (ZDB-30-PAD)EBC31216965 (ZDB-89-EBL)EBL31216965 (OCoLC)1366491453 (DE-599)BVBBV049873892 |
dewey-full | 342.083 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 342 - Constitutional and administrative law |
dewey-raw | 342.083 |
dewey-search | 342.083 |
dewey-sort | 3342.083 |
dewey-tens | 340 - Law |
discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
edition | 1st ed |
format | Electronic eBook |
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A Note on Terminology -- ii The Concept of Citizenship -- 1 Historical Traces of the Concept of Citizenship -- 2 Theoretical Conceptualizations of Citizenship -- 3 Citizenship as a Legal Status -- 3.1 The Concept of Citizenship in International Law -- 3.2 Acquisition and Loss of Citizenship -- 3.3 Functions of Citizenship -- 3.3.1 Diplomatic Protection -- 3.3.2 Political Rights -- 3.3.3 Right to Enter and Remain -- iii Citizenship as a Human Right -- 1 Citizenship as Access to (Human) Rights -- 2 Citizenship as a Moral Human Right -- 2.1 Hannah Arendt's Right to Have Rights -- 2.2 Seyla Benhabib's Cosmopolitan Right to Membership -- 2.3 Ruth Rubio-Marín's Jus Domicilii -- 2.4 Joseph Carens' Theory of Social Membership -- 2.5 Ayelet Shachar's Jus Nexi -- 2.6 David Owen's Right to a Nationality -- 3 Citizenship as a Legal Human Right -- Chapter 3 Domaine Réservé?: Statehood, Sovereignty and Nationality -- i Statehood and Sovereignty in International Law -- 1 Elements of Statehood -- 2 Statehood and Sovereignty -- 3 State Sovereignty and the Doctrine of Domaine Réservé -- ii The Traditional Perception of Nationality as a Domaine Réservé and Its Development -- iii A Historical Perspective on the Regulation of Nationality in International Law -- 1 Early Multilateral Regulation: Avoiding Conflicts -- 2 Internationalization and Specialization: The 1930 Hague Convention -- 3 The After-War Period: The Rise of Individual Rights</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">4 The Parallel Development: The Indirect Regulation of Nationality -- iv Conclusion: Growing International Support -- Chapter 4 Beyond Sovereignty: The Right to Nationality in International Law -- i Article 15 Universal Declaration of Human Rights -- 1 The Drafting History of Article 15 udhr -- 2 The Scope and Content of Article 15 udhr -- 3 The Customary Nature of Article 15 udhr -- ii The Right to Nationality in International Law -- 1 The Right to Nationality at Universal Level -- 1.1 The UN Core Human Rights Treaties -- 1.1.1 Article 24(3) International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights -- 1.1.2 Article 7 and 8 Convention on the Rights of the Child -- 1.1.3 Article 29 Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families -- 1.1.4 Article 9 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women -- 1.1.5 Article 5 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination -- 1.1.6 Article 18 Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities -- 1.2 The Statelessness Conventions and the Refugee Convention -- 1.2.1 The Convention Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons -- 1.2.2 The Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness -- 1.2.3 The Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees -- 1.3 Soft Law Instruments at Universal Level -- 1.3.1 Resolutions by UN Bodies -- 1.3.1.1 The UN General Assembly -- 1.3.1.2 The UN Human Rights Council -- 1.3.1.3 The Global Compacts on Migration and Refugees -- 1.3.2 Draft Articles of the International Law Commission -- 2 The Right to Nationality at Regional Level -- 2.1 The Americas -- 2.2 Europe -- 2.2.1 Council of Europe -- 2.2.1.1 European Convention on Nationality -- 2.2.1.2 European Convention on Human Rights -- 2.2.1.3 Other Council of Europe Instruments -- A Convention on the Reduction of Cases of Multiple Nationality</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">B Convention on the Avoidance of Statelessness in Relation to State Succession -- C Resolutions and Recommendations of Council of Europe Bodies -- 2.2.2 Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe -- 2.2.3 European Union -- 2.3 Africa -- 2.3.1 African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights -- 2.3.2 Draft Protocol on the Specific Aspects of the Right to a Nationality and the Eradication of Statelessness in Africa -- 2.3.3 African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child -- 2.4 Middle East and North Africa -- 2.4.1 Arab Charter on Human Rights -- 2.4.2 Covenant on the Rights of the Child in Islam -- 2.5 Asia and Pacific -- 2.6 Interim Conclusion -- iii The Right to Nationality as Customary International Law? -- iv Conclusion: The Body of International Human Rights Law -- Chapter 5 Defining the Right to Nationality: Rights and Obligations -- i Qualifying the Right to Nationality -- ii The Scope of the Right to Nationality -- 1 Personal Scope of Application -- 1.1 Everyone -- 1.2 Instruments with a Limited Personal Scope -- 1.3 Legal Persons? -- 2 Substantive Scope of Application -- 2.1 Nationality -- 2.2 Acquisition, Change and Loss of Nationality -- 3 Territorial Scope of Application -- 4 Temporal Scope of Application -- iii Rights and Obligations Derived from the Right to Nationality -- 1 Negative and Positive Obligations -- 2 Transversal Obligations -- 2.1 Prohibition of Discrimination -- 2.1.1 Discrimination in the Context of Acquisition, Change and Loss of Nationality -- 2.1.2 Discrimination on the Basis of Nationality -- 2.2 The Prohibition of Arbitrariness and the Question of Proportionality -- 2.3 The Duty to Prevent and Reduce Statelessness -- 3 Obligations Regarding the Acquisition of Nationality -- 3.1 Right of the Child to Acquire a Nationality -- 3.2 Acquisition of Nationality by Stateless Persons and Refugees</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">3.3 Acquisition in Situations of State Succession -- 3.4 Prohibition of Extraterritorial Naturalizations -- 3.5 Prohibition of Forced Naturalization -- 3.6 Right to Naturalization -- 4 Obligations Regarding the Effective Enjoyment of Nationality -- 5 Obligations Regarding Change of Nationality -- 5.1 The Right to Change One's Nationality -- 5.2 The Right to Renounce One's Nationality -- 5.3 A Right to Dual or Multiple Nationality? -- 6 Obligations Regarding Involuntary Loss of Nationality -- 6.1 The Prohibition of Arbitrary Deprivation of Nationality -- 6.1.1 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality on Discriminatory Grounds -- 6.1.2 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality Resulting in Statelessness? -- 6.1.3 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality for the Sole Purpose of Expulsion -- 6.2 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality of Children -- 6.3 Prohibition of Mass Deprivation of Nationality -- 7 Obligations Regarding the Procedure -- 7.1 Access to the Procedure -- 7.2 Due Process -- 7.3 Right to Review -- iv Lawful Interference with the Right to Nationality? -- 1 Legality of Interference -- 2 Legitimacy of Interference -- 3 Balancing of Interests -- v Enforceability and Implementation of the Right to Nationality -- vi Conclusion: Identifiable and Predictable Rights and Obligations -- Chapter 6 An Individual Right: Realizing the Right to Citizenship -- i The Need to Strengthen the Right to Citizenship -- 1 The Limitations of Birthright-Based Modes of Citizenship Acquisition -- 2 The Claim for Political Participation and Representation -- 3 The Exclusionary Effects of Citizenship -- 4 The Individual Rights' Dimension -- ii Jus Nexi - a Genuine-Connection Principle for Citizenship Acquisition -- 1 Theoretical Foundations of the Concept of Jus Nexi -- 2 From 'Private Life' and 'One's Own Country' to Jus Nexi</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">2.1 The Right to Private Life and the Concept of Social Identity -- 2.2 The Right to Enter One's Own Country -- 3 Connecting Factors for a Jus Nexi -- 3.1 Territorial Ties -- 3.1.1 Residence -- 3.1.2 Birth in the Territory -- 3.1.3 Protection -- 3.2 Familial Ties -- 3.2.1 Family Ties -- 3.2.2 Descent -- 3.2.3 Childhood and Adolescence -- 3.3 Social, Professional, Cultural or Political Ties -- 4 A Dynamic and Non-exclusive Concept -- iii Linking Jus Nexi and the Right to Citizenship -- iv The Implications of a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- 1 Scope of a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- 2 Content of a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- 2.1 The Right to Acquire Citizenship at Birth -- 2.2 The Right to the Citizenship of a Specific State -- 2.3 The Right to Dual and Multiple Citizenship -- 2.4 Limitations upon Involuntary Loss of Citizenship -- 3 Legitimate Interferences - Balancing a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- v Conclusion: Strengthening the Right to Citizenship -- Chapter 7 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Table of Other Materials -- Table of Cases -- Universal and Regional Bodies -- Permanent Court of International Justice/International Court of Justice -- African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights/African Court of Human and Peoples' Rights -- African Committee of Experts on the Rights and Welfare of the Child -- Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women -- Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination -- Committee on the Rights of the Child -- Court of Justice of the European Union -- Eritrea Ethiopia Claims Commission -- European Court of Human Rights/ European Commission of Human Rights -- Human Rights Committee -- Inter-American Court of Human Rights -- International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes -- Iran-United States Claims Tribunal</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Italy and United States Conciliation Commission</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="520" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">This book provides an in-depth analysis of the scope and content of the right to citizenship in international human rights law and argues for a rights-based interpretation of the right to citizenship based on the principle of jus nexi</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="776" ind1="0" ind2="8"><subfield code="i">Erscheint auch als</subfield><subfield code="n">Druck-Ausgabe</subfield><subfield code="a">von Rütte, Barbara</subfield><subfield code="t">The Human Right to Citizenship</subfield><subfield code="d">Boston : BRILL,c2022</subfield><subfield code="z">9789004517516</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="912" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">ZDB-30-PQE</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="943" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-035213350</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="966" ind1="e" ind2=" "><subfield code="u">https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/hwr/detail.action?docID=31216965</subfield><subfield code="l">DE-2070s</subfield><subfield code="p">ZDB-30-PQE</subfield><subfield code="q">HWR_PDA_PQE</subfield><subfield code="x">Aggregator</subfield><subfield code="3">Volltext</subfield></datafield></record></collection> |
id | DE-604.BV049873892 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-09-19T05:21:48Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9789004517523 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-035213350 |
oclc_num | 1366491453 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-2070s |
owner_facet | DE-2070s |
physical | 1 Online-Ressource (477 Seiten) |
psigel | ZDB-30-PQE ZDB-30-PQE HWR_PDA_PQE |
publishDate | 2022 |
publishDateSearch | 2022 |
publishDateSort | 2022 |
publisher | BRILL |
record_format | marc |
series2 | International Refugee Law Series |
spelling | von Rütte, Barbara Verfasser aut The Human Right to Citizenship Situating the Right to Citizenship Within International and Regional Human Rights Law 1st ed Boston BRILL 2022 ©2022 1 Online-Ressource (477 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier International Refugee Law Series v.21 Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- List of Tables -- Abbreviations -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- i Citizenship and International Migration - Setting the Problem -- ii Objective, Scope and Delimitation -- iii Approach and Outlook -- Chapter 2 Citizenship and Nationality: Terms, Concepts and Rights -- i Citizenship or Nationality? A Note on Terminology -- ii The Concept of Citizenship -- 1 Historical Traces of the Concept of Citizenship -- 2 Theoretical Conceptualizations of Citizenship -- 3 Citizenship as a Legal Status -- 3.1 The Concept of Citizenship in International Law -- 3.2 Acquisition and Loss of Citizenship -- 3.3 Functions of Citizenship -- 3.3.1 Diplomatic Protection -- 3.3.2 Political Rights -- 3.3.3 Right to Enter and Remain -- iii Citizenship as a Human Right -- 1 Citizenship as Access to (Human) Rights -- 2 Citizenship as a Moral Human Right -- 2.1 Hannah Arendt's Right to Have Rights -- 2.2 Seyla Benhabib's Cosmopolitan Right to Membership -- 2.3 Ruth Rubio-Marín's Jus Domicilii -- 2.4 Joseph Carens' Theory of Social Membership -- 2.5 Ayelet Shachar's Jus Nexi -- 2.6 David Owen's Right to a Nationality -- 3 Citizenship as a Legal Human Right -- Chapter 3 Domaine Réservé?: Statehood, Sovereignty and Nationality -- i Statehood and Sovereignty in International Law -- 1 Elements of Statehood -- 2 Statehood and Sovereignty -- 3 State Sovereignty and the Doctrine of Domaine Réservé -- ii The Traditional Perception of Nationality as a Domaine Réservé and Its Development -- iii A Historical Perspective on the Regulation of Nationality in International Law -- 1 Early Multilateral Regulation: Avoiding Conflicts -- 2 Internationalization and Specialization: The 1930 Hague Convention -- 3 The After-War Period: The Rise of Individual Rights 4 The Parallel Development: The Indirect Regulation of Nationality -- iv Conclusion: Growing International Support -- Chapter 4 Beyond Sovereignty: The Right to Nationality in International Law -- i Article 15 Universal Declaration of Human Rights -- 1 The Drafting History of Article 15 udhr -- 2 The Scope and Content of Article 15 udhr -- 3 The Customary Nature of Article 15 udhr -- ii The Right to Nationality in International Law -- 1 The Right to Nationality at Universal Level -- 1.1 The UN Core Human Rights Treaties -- 1.1.1 Article 24(3) International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights -- 1.1.2 Article 7 and 8 Convention on the Rights of the Child -- 1.1.3 Article 29 Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families -- 1.1.4 Article 9 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women -- 1.1.5 Article 5 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination -- 1.1.6 Article 18 Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities -- 1.2 The Statelessness Conventions and the Refugee Convention -- 1.2.1 The Convention Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons -- 1.2.2 The Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness -- 1.2.3 The Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees -- 1.3 Soft Law Instruments at Universal Level -- 1.3.1 Resolutions by UN Bodies -- 1.3.1.1 The UN General Assembly -- 1.3.1.2 The UN Human Rights Council -- 1.3.1.3 The Global Compacts on Migration and Refugees -- 1.3.2 Draft Articles of the International Law Commission -- 2 The Right to Nationality at Regional Level -- 2.1 The Americas -- 2.2 Europe -- 2.2.1 Council of Europe -- 2.2.1.1 European Convention on Nationality -- 2.2.1.2 European Convention on Human Rights -- 2.2.1.3 Other Council of Europe Instruments -- A Convention on the Reduction of Cases of Multiple Nationality B Convention on the Avoidance of Statelessness in Relation to State Succession -- C Resolutions and Recommendations of Council of Europe Bodies -- 2.2.2 Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe -- 2.2.3 European Union -- 2.3 Africa -- 2.3.1 African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights -- 2.3.2 Draft Protocol on the Specific Aspects of the Right to a Nationality and the Eradication of Statelessness in Africa -- 2.3.3 African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child -- 2.4 Middle East and North Africa -- 2.4.1 Arab Charter on Human Rights -- 2.4.2 Covenant on the Rights of the Child in Islam -- 2.5 Asia and Pacific -- 2.6 Interim Conclusion -- iii The Right to Nationality as Customary International Law? -- iv Conclusion: The Body of International Human Rights Law -- Chapter 5 Defining the Right to Nationality: Rights and Obligations -- i Qualifying the Right to Nationality -- ii The Scope of the Right to Nationality -- 1 Personal Scope of Application -- 1.1 Everyone -- 1.2 Instruments with a Limited Personal Scope -- 1.3 Legal Persons? -- 2 Substantive Scope of Application -- 2.1 Nationality -- 2.2 Acquisition, Change and Loss of Nationality -- 3 Territorial Scope of Application -- 4 Temporal Scope of Application -- iii Rights and Obligations Derived from the Right to Nationality -- 1 Negative and Positive Obligations -- 2 Transversal Obligations -- 2.1 Prohibition of Discrimination -- 2.1.1 Discrimination in the Context of Acquisition, Change and Loss of Nationality -- 2.1.2 Discrimination on the Basis of Nationality -- 2.2 The Prohibition of Arbitrariness and the Question of Proportionality -- 2.3 The Duty to Prevent and Reduce Statelessness -- 3 Obligations Regarding the Acquisition of Nationality -- 3.1 Right of the Child to Acquire a Nationality -- 3.2 Acquisition of Nationality by Stateless Persons and Refugees 3.3 Acquisition in Situations of State Succession -- 3.4 Prohibition of Extraterritorial Naturalizations -- 3.5 Prohibition of Forced Naturalization -- 3.6 Right to Naturalization -- 4 Obligations Regarding the Effective Enjoyment of Nationality -- 5 Obligations Regarding Change of Nationality -- 5.1 The Right to Change One's Nationality -- 5.2 The Right to Renounce One's Nationality -- 5.3 A Right to Dual or Multiple Nationality? -- 6 Obligations Regarding Involuntary Loss of Nationality -- 6.1 The Prohibition of Arbitrary Deprivation of Nationality -- 6.1.1 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality on Discriminatory Grounds -- 6.1.2 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality Resulting in Statelessness? -- 6.1.3 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality for the Sole Purpose of Expulsion -- 6.2 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality of Children -- 6.3 Prohibition of Mass Deprivation of Nationality -- 7 Obligations Regarding the Procedure -- 7.1 Access to the Procedure -- 7.2 Due Process -- 7.3 Right to Review -- iv Lawful Interference with the Right to Nationality? -- 1 Legality of Interference -- 2 Legitimacy of Interference -- 3 Balancing of Interests -- v Enforceability and Implementation of the Right to Nationality -- vi Conclusion: Identifiable and Predictable Rights and Obligations -- Chapter 6 An Individual Right: Realizing the Right to Citizenship -- i The Need to Strengthen the Right to Citizenship -- 1 The Limitations of Birthright-Based Modes of Citizenship Acquisition -- 2 The Claim for Political Participation and Representation -- 3 The Exclusionary Effects of Citizenship -- 4 The Individual Rights' Dimension -- ii Jus Nexi - a Genuine-Connection Principle for Citizenship Acquisition -- 1 Theoretical Foundations of the Concept of Jus Nexi -- 2 From 'Private Life' and 'One's Own Country' to Jus Nexi 2.1 The Right to Private Life and the Concept of Social Identity -- 2.2 The Right to Enter One's Own Country -- 3 Connecting Factors for a Jus Nexi -- 3.1 Territorial Ties -- 3.1.1 Residence -- 3.1.2 Birth in the Territory -- 3.1.3 Protection -- 3.2 Familial Ties -- 3.2.1 Family Ties -- 3.2.2 Descent -- 3.2.3 Childhood and Adolescence -- 3.3 Social, Professional, Cultural or Political Ties -- 4 A Dynamic and Non-exclusive Concept -- iii Linking Jus Nexi and the Right to Citizenship -- iv The Implications of a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- 1 Scope of a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- 2 Content of a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- 2.1 The Right to Acquire Citizenship at Birth -- 2.2 The Right to the Citizenship of a Specific State -- 2.3 The Right to Dual and Multiple Citizenship -- 2.4 Limitations upon Involuntary Loss of Citizenship -- 3 Legitimate Interferences - Balancing a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- v Conclusion: Strengthening the Right to Citizenship -- Chapter 7 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Table of Other Materials -- Table of Cases -- Universal and Regional Bodies -- Permanent Court of International Justice/International Court of Justice -- African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights/African Court of Human and Peoples' Rights -- African Committee of Experts on the Rights and Welfare of the Child -- Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women -- Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination -- Committee on the Rights of the Child -- Court of Justice of the European Union -- Eritrea Ethiopia Claims Commission -- European Court of Human Rights/ European Commission of Human Rights -- Human Rights Committee -- Inter-American Court of Human Rights -- International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes -- Iran-United States Claims Tribunal Italy and United States Conciliation Commission This book provides an in-depth analysis of the scope and content of the right to citizenship in international human rights law and argues for a rights-based interpretation of the right to citizenship based on the principle of jus nexi Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe von Rütte, Barbara The Human Right to Citizenship Boston : BRILL,c2022 9789004517516 |
spellingShingle | von Rütte, Barbara The Human Right to Citizenship Situating the Right to Citizenship Within International and Regional Human Rights Law Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- List of Tables -- Abbreviations -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- i Citizenship and International Migration - Setting the Problem -- ii Objective, Scope and Delimitation -- iii Approach and Outlook -- Chapter 2 Citizenship and Nationality: Terms, Concepts and Rights -- i Citizenship or Nationality? A Note on Terminology -- ii The Concept of Citizenship -- 1 Historical Traces of the Concept of Citizenship -- 2 Theoretical Conceptualizations of Citizenship -- 3 Citizenship as a Legal Status -- 3.1 The Concept of Citizenship in International Law -- 3.2 Acquisition and Loss of Citizenship -- 3.3 Functions of Citizenship -- 3.3.1 Diplomatic Protection -- 3.3.2 Political Rights -- 3.3.3 Right to Enter and Remain -- iii Citizenship as a Human Right -- 1 Citizenship as Access to (Human) Rights -- 2 Citizenship as a Moral Human Right -- 2.1 Hannah Arendt's Right to Have Rights -- 2.2 Seyla Benhabib's Cosmopolitan Right to Membership -- 2.3 Ruth Rubio-Marín's Jus Domicilii -- 2.4 Joseph Carens' Theory of Social Membership -- 2.5 Ayelet Shachar's Jus Nexi -- 2.6 David Owen's Right to a Nationality -- 3 Citizenship as a Legal Human Right -- Chapter 3 Domaine Réservé?: Statehood, Sovereignty and Nationality -- i Statehood and Sovereignty in International Law -- 1 Elements of Statehood -- 2 Statehood and Sovereignty -- 3 State Sovereignty and the Doctrine of Domaine Réservé -- ii The Traditional Perception of Nationality as a Domaine Réservé and Its Development -- iii A Historical Perspective on the Regulation of Nationality in International Law -- 1 Early Multilateral Regulation: Avoiding Conflicts -- 2 Internationalization and Specialization: The 1930 Hague Convention -- 3 The After-War Period: The Rise of Individual Rights 4 The Parallel Development: The Indirect Regulation of Nationality -- iv Conclusion: Growing International Support -- Chapter 4 Beyond Sovereignty: The Right to Nationality in International Law -- i Article 15 Universal Declaration of Human Rights -- 1 The Drafting History of Article 15 udhr -- 2 The Scope and Content of Article 15 udhr -- 3 The Customary Nature of Article 15 udhr -- ii The Right to Nationality in International Law -- 1 The Right to Nationality at Universal Level -- 1.1 The UN Core Human Rights Treaties -- 1.1.1 Article 24(3) International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights -- 1.1.2 Article 7 and 8 Convention on the Rights of the Child -- 1.1.3 Article 29 Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families -- 1.1.4 Article 9 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women -- 1.1.5 Article 5 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination -- 1.1.6 Article 18 Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities -- 1.2 The Statelessness Conventions and the Refugee Convention -- 1.2.1 The Convention Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons -- 1.2.2 The Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness -- 1.2.3 The Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees -- 1.3 Soft Law Instruments at Universal Level -- 1.3.1 Resolutions by UN Bodies -- 1.3.1.1 The UN General Assembly -- 1.3.1.2 The UN Human Rights Council -- 1.3.1.3 The Global Compacts on Migration and Refugees -- 1.3.2 Draft Articles of the International Law Commission -- 2 The Right to Nationality at Regional Level -- 2.1 The Americas -- 2.2 Europe -- 2.2.1 Council of Europe -- 2.2.1.1 European Convention on Nationality -- 2.2.1.2 European Convention on Human Rights -- 2.2.1.3 Other Council of Europe Instruments -- A Convention on the Reduction of Cases of Multiple Nationality B Convention on the Avoidance of Statelessness in Relation to State Succession -- C Resolutions and Recommendations of Council of Europe Bodies -- 2.2.2 Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe -- 2.2.3 European Union -- 2.3 Africa -- 2.3.1 African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights -- 2.3.2 Draft Protocol on the Specific Aspects of the Right to a Nationality and the Eradication of Statelessness in Africa -- 2.3.3 African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child -- 2.4 Middle East and North Africa -- 2.4.1 Arab Charter on Human Rights -- 2.4.2 Covenant on the Rights of the Child in Islam -- 2.5 Asia and Pacific -- 2.6 Interim Conclusion -- iii The Right to Nationality as Customary International Law? -- iv Conclusion: The Body of International Human Rights Law -- Chapter 5 Defining the Right to Nationality: Rights and Obligations -- i Qualifying the Right to Nationality -- ii The Scope of the Right to Nationality -- 1 Personal Scope of Application -- 1.1 Everyone -- 1.2 Instruments with a Limited Personal Scope -- 1.3 Legal Persons? -- 2 Substantive Scope of Application -- 2.1 Nationality -- 2.2 Acquisition, Change and Loss of Nationality -- 3 Territorial Scope of Application -- 4 Temporal Scope of Application -- iii Rights and Obligations Derived from the Right to Nationality -- 1 Negative and Positive Obligations -- 2 Transversal Obligations -- 2.1 Prohibition of Discrimination -- 2.1.1 Discrimination in the Context of Acquisition, Change and Loss of Nationality -- 2.1.2 Discrimination on the Basis of Nationality -- 2.2 The Prohibition of Arbitrariness and the Question of Proportionality -- 2.3 The Duty to Prevent and Reduce Statelessness -- 3 Obligations Regarding the Acquisition of Nationality -- 3.1 Right of the Child to Acquire a Nationality -- 3.2 Acquisition of Nationality by Stateless Persons and Refugees 3.3 Acquisition in Situations of State Succession -- 3.4 Prohibition of Extraterritorial Naturalizations -- 3.5 Prohibition of Forced Naturalization -- 3.6 Right to Naturalization -- 4 Obligations Regarding the Effective Enjoyment of Nationality -- 5 Obligations Regarding Change of Nationality -- 5.1 The Right to Change One's Nationality -- 5.2 The Right to Renounce One's Nationality -- 5.3 A Right to Dual or Multiple Nationality? -- 6 Obligations Regarding Involuntary Loss of Nationality -- 6.1 The Prohibition of Arbitrary Deprivation of Nationality -- 6.1.1 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality on Discriminatory Grounds -- 6.1.2 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality Resulting in Statelessness? -- 6.1.3 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality for the Sole Purpose of Expulsion -- 6.2 Prohibition of Deprivation of Nationality of Children -- 6.3 Prohibition of Mass Deprivation of Nationality -- 7 Obligations Regarding the Procedure -- 7.1 Access to the Procedure -- 7.2 Due Process -- 7.3 Right to Review -- iv Lawful Interference with the Right to Nationality? -- 1 Legality of Interference -- 2 Legitimacy of Interference -- 3 Balancing of Interests -- v Enforceability and Implementation of the Right to Nationality -- vi Conclusion: Identifiable and Predictable Rights and Obligations -- Chapter 6 An Individual Right: Realizing the Right to Citizenship -- i The Need to Strengthen the Right to Citizenship -- 1 The Limitations of Birthright-Based Modes of Citizenship Acquisition -- 2 The Claim for Political Participation and Representation -- 3 The Exclusionary Effects of Citizenship -- 4 The Individual Rights' Dimension -- ii Jus Nexi - a Genuine-Connection Principle for Citizenship Acquisition -- 1 Theoretical Foundations of the Concept of Jus Nexi -- 2 From 'Private Life' and 'One's Own Country' to Jus Nexi 2.1 The Right to Private Life and the Concept of Social Identity -- 2.2 The Right to Enter One's Own Country -- 3 Connecting Factors for a Jus Nexi -- 3.1 Territorial Ties -- 3.1.1 Residence -- 3.1.2 Birth in the Territory -- 3.1.3 Protection -- 3.2 Familial Ties -- 3.2.1 Family Ties -- 3.2.2 Descent -- 3.2.3 Childhood and Adolescence -- 3.3 Social, Professional, Cultural or Political Ties -- 4 A Dynamic and Non-exclusive Concept -- iii Linking Jus Nexi and the Right to Citizenship -- iv The Implications of a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- 1 Scope of a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- 2 Content of a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- 2.1 The Right to Acquire Citizenship at Birth -- 2.2 The Right to the Citizenship of a Specific State -- 2.3 The Right to Dual and Multiple Citizenship -- 2.4 Limitations upon Involuntary Loss of Citizenship -- 3 Legitimate Interferences - Balancing a Jus Nexi-Based Right to Citizenship -- v Conclusion: Strengthening the Right to Citizenship -- Chapter 7 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Table of Other Materials -- Table of Cases -- Universal and Regional Bodies -- Permanent Court of International Justice/International Court of Justice -- African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights/African Court of Human and Peoples' Rights -- African Committee of Experts on the Rights and Welfare of the Child -- Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women -- Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination -- Committee on the Rights of the Child -- Court of Justice of the European Union -- Eritrea Ethiopia Claims Commission -- European Court of Human Rights/ European Commission of Human Rights -- Human Rights Committee -- Inter-American Court of Human Rights -- International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes -- Iran-United States Claims Tribunal Italy and United States Conciliation Commission |
title | The Human Right to Citizenship Situating the Right to Citizenship Within International and Regional Human Rights Law |
title_auth | The Human Right to Citizenship Situating the Right to Citizenship Within International and Regional Human Rights Law |
title_exact_search | The Human Right to Citizenship Situating the Right to Citizenship Within International and Regional Human Rights Law |
title_full | The Human Right to Citizenship Situating the Right to Citizenship Within International and Regional Human Rights Law |
title_fullStr | The Human Right to Citizenship Situating the Right to Citizenship Within International and Regional Human Rights Law |
title_full_unstemmed | The Human Right to Citizenship Situating the Right to Citizenship Within International and Regional Human Rights Law |
title_short | The Human Right to Citizenship |
title_sort | the human right to citizenship situating the right to citizenship within international and regional human rights law |
title_sub | Situating the Right to Citizenship Within International and Regional Human Rights Law |
work_keys_str_mv | AT vonruttebarbara thehumanrighttocitizenshipsituatingtherighttocitizenshipwithininternationalandregionalhumanrightslaw |