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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham, Switzerland :Springer Open,
    UID:
    almafu_BV045274613
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (xxi, 358 Seiten).
    ISBN: 978-3-319-92719-0
    Series Statement: IMISCOE research series
    Note: Open Access
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-319-92718-3
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-319-92720-6
    Language: English
    Subjects: Law
    RVK:
    Keywords: Staatsangehörigkeit ; Staatsangehörigkeitsrecht ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Aufsatzsammlung
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Cover
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    Author information: Bauböck, Rainer 1953-
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham : Springer Nature | Cham :Springer International Publishing :
    UID:
    almahu_9949595412402882
    Format: 1 online resource (XXI, 358 p.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 2018.
    ISBN: 3-319-92719-1
    Series Statement: IMISCOE Research Series,
    Content: This open access book discusses how national citizenship is being transformed by economic, social and political change. It focuses on the emergence of global markets where citizenship is for sale and on how new reproduction technologies impact citizenship by descent. It also discusses the return of banishment through denationalisation of terrorist suspects, and the impact of digital technologies, such as blockchain, on the future of democratic citizenship. The book provides a wide range of views on these issues from legal scholars, political scientists, and political practitioners. It is structured as a series of four conversations in which authors respond to each other. This exchange of arguments provides unique depth to current debates about the future of citizenship. .
    Note: Part I: Should Citizenship Be for Sale?: Summary: Global, European and National Questions About the Price of Citizenship: Rainer Bauböck -- Dangerous Liaisons: Money and Citizenship: Ayelet Shachar -- Cash-for-Passports and the End of Citizenship: Peter J. Spiro -- Citizenship for Those who Invest into the Future of the State Is not Wrong, the Price Is the Problem: Raul Magni Berton -- The Price of Selling Citizenship: Chris Armstrong -- Global Mobility Corridors for the Ultra-Rich. The Neoliberal Transformation of Citizenship: Roxana Barbulescu -- The Maltese Falcon, or: my Porsche for a Passport!: Jelena Dzankic -- What Is Wrong with Selling Citizenship? It Corrupts Democracy!: Rainer Bauböck -- What Money Can’t Buy: Face-to-Face Cooperation and Local Democratic Life: Paulina Ochoa Espejo -- If You Do not Like Selling Passports, Give Them for Free to Those who Deserve them: Vesco Paskalev -- Citizenship for Real: Its Hypocrisy, Its Randomness, Its Price: Dimitry Kochenov -- Trading Citizenship, Human Capital and the European Union: David Owen -- Citizenship for Sale: Could and Should the EU Intervene?: Jo Shaw -- Linking Citizenship to Income Undermines European Values. We Need Shared Criteria and Guidelines for Access to EU Citizenship: Hannes Swoboda -- Coda : Ayelet Shachar -- Part II: Bloodlines and Belonging: Bloodlines and Belonging: Time to Abandon Ius Sanguinis?: Costica Dumbrava -- Ius Filiationis: A Defence of Citizenship by Descent: Rainer Bauböck -- Tainted Law? Why History Cannot Provide the Justification for Abandoning Ius Sanguinis: Jannis Panagiotidis -- Family Matters: Modernise, Don’t Abandon, Jus Sanguinis: Scott Titshaw -- Abolishing Ius Sanguinis Citizenship: A Proposal Too Restrained and Too Radical: Kristin Collins -- Citizenship Without Magic: Lois Harder -- The Janus-Face of Ius Sanguinis: Protecting Migrant Children and Expanding Ethnic Nations: Francesca Decimo -- The Prior Question: What Do We Need State Citizenship for?: David Owen -- No More Blood: Kerry Abrams -- Law by Blood or Blood by Law?: David de Groot -- Limiting the Transmission of Family Advantage: Ius Sanguinis with an Expiration Date: Iseult Honohan -- Retain Ius Sanguinis, but Don’t Take It Literally!: Eva Ersbøll -- Distributing Some, but Not All Rights of Citizenship According to Ius Sanguinis: Ana Tanasoca -- Learning from Naturalisation Debates: The Right to an Appropriate Citizenship at Birth: Katja Swider and Caia Vlieks -- Don’t Put the Baby in the Dirty Bathwater! A Rejoinder: Costica Dumbrava -- Part III: The Return of Banishment: The Return of Banishment: Do the New Denationalisation Policies Weaken Citizenship?:Audrey Macklin -- Terrorist Expatriation: All Show, No Byte, No Future: Peter J. Spiro -- Should Those Who Attack the Nation Have an Absolute Right to Remain Its Citizens?: Peter H. Schuck -- Terrorists Repudiate Their Own Citizenship: Christian Joppke -- It’s not About Their Citizenship, it’s About Ours: Vesco Paskalev -- You Can’t Lose What You Haven’t Got: Citizenship Acquisition and Loss in Africa: Bronwen Manby -- Revocation of Citizenship of Terrorists: A Matter of Political Expediency: Kay Hailbronner -- Whose Bad Guys Are Terrorists?: Rainer Bauböck -- Human Rights for All Is Better than Citizenship Rights for Some: Daniel Kanstroom -- Denationalisation, Assassination, Territory: Some (U.S.-Prompted) Reflections: Linda Bosniak -- Beware States Piercing Holes Into Citizenship: Matthew J. Gibney -- Disowning Citizens: Reuven (Ruvi) Ziegler -- Our Epoch’s Little Banishments: Saskia Sassen -- Deprivation of Citizenship: Is There an Issue of EU Law?: Jo Shaw -- On Producing the Alien Within: A Reply: Audrey Macklin -- Part IV: Cloud Communities: Cloud Communities: The Dawn of Global Citizenship?: Liav Orgad -- Citizenship in Cloud Cuckoo Land?: Rainer Bauböck -- Citizenship in the Era of Blockchain-Based Virtual Nations: Primavera De Filippi -- Global Citizenship for the Stay-at-Homes: Francesca Strumia -- A World Without Law; A World Without Politics: Robert Post -- Virtual Politics, Real Guns: On Cloud Community, Violence, and Human Rights: Michael Blake -- A World Wide Web of Citizenship; Peter J. Spiro -- Citizenship Forecast: Partly Cloudy with Chances of Algorithms: Costica Dumbrava -- The Separation of Territory and State: a Digital French Revolution?: Yussef Al Tamimi -- A Brave New Dawn? Digital Cakes, Cloudy Governance and Citizenship á la Carte: Jelena Dzankic -- Old Divides New Devices: Global Citizenship for Only Half of the World: Lea Ypi -- Escapist Technology in the Service of Neo-Feudalism: Dimitry Kochenov -- Cloud Communities and the Materiality of the Digital: Stefania Milan -- Cloud Agoras: When Blockchain Technology Meets Arendt’s Virtual Public Spaces,: Dora Kostakopoulou -- Global Cryptodemocracy Is Possible and Desirable: Ehud Shapiro -- The Future of Citizenship: Global and Digital – A Rejoinder: Liav Orgad. . , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3-319-92718-3
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham : Springer Nature
    UID:
    gbv_1778541291
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (342 p.)
    ISBN: 9783319927190 , 9783319927183
    Series Statement: IMISCOE Research Series
    Content: This open access book discusses how national citizenship is being transformed by economic, social and political change. It focuses on the emergence of global markets where citizenship is for sale and on how new reproduction technologies impact citizenship by descent. It also discusses the return of banishment through denationalisation of terrorist suspects, and the impact of digital technologies, such as blockchain, on the future of democratic citizenship. The book provides a wide range of views on these issues from legal scholars, political scientists, and political practitioners. It is structured as a series of four conversations in which authors respond to each other. This exchange of arguments provides unique depth to current debates about the future of citizenship
    Note: English
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer,
    UID:
    kobvindex_HPB1054795815
    Format: 1 online resource (XXI, 358 pages)
    ISBN: 9783319927190 , 3319927191 , 9783319927206 , 3319927205 , 9783030065003 , 3030065006
    Series Statement: IMISCOE Research Series,
    Content: This open access book discusses how national citizenship is being transformed by economic, social and political change. It focuses on the emergence of global markets where citizenship is for sale and on how new reproduction technologies impact citizenship by descent. It also discusses the return of banishment through denationalisation of terrorist suspects, and the impact of digital technologies, such as blockchain, on the future of democratic citizenship. The book provides a wide range of views on these issues from legal scholars, political scientists, and political practitioners. It is structured as a series of four conversations in which authors respond to each other. This exchange of arguments provides unique depth to current debates about the future of citizenship.
    Note: Part I: Should Citizenship Be for Sale?: Summary: Global, European and National Questions About the Price of Citizenship: Rainer Bauböck -- Dangerous Liaisons: Money and Citizenship: Ayelet Shachar -- Cash-for-Passports and the End of Citizenship: Peter J. Spiro -- Citizenship for Those who Invest into the Future of the State Is not Wrong, the Price Is the Problem: Raul Magni Berton -- The Price of Selling Citizenship: Chris Armstrong -- Global Mobility Corridors for the Ultra-Rich. The Neoliberal Transformation of Citizenship: Roxana Barbulescu -- The Maltese Falcon, or: my Porsche for a Passport!: Jelena Dzankic -- What Is Wrong with Selling Citizenship? It Corrupts Democracy!: Rainer Bauböck -- What Money Can't Buy: Face-to-Face Cooperation and Local Democratic Life: Paulina Ochoa Espejo -- If You Do not Like Selling Passports, Give Them for Free to Those who Deserve them: Vesco Paskalev -- Citizenship for Real: Its Hypocrisy, Its Randomness, Its Price: Dimitry Kochenov -- Trading Citizenship, Human Capital and the European Union: David Owen -- Citizenship for Sale: Could and Should the EU Intervene?: Jo Shaw -- Linking Citizenship to Income Undermines European Values. We Need Shared Criteria and Guidelines for Access to EU Citizenship: Hannes Swoboda -- Coda : Ayelet Shachar -- Part II: Bloodlines and Belonging: Bloodlines and Belonging: Time to Abandon Ius Sanguinis?: Costica Dumbrava -- Ius Filiationis: A Defence of Citizenship by Descent: Rainer Bauböck -- Tainted Law? Why History Cannot Provide the Justification for Abandoning Ius Sanguinis: Jannis Panagiotidis -- Family Matters: Modernise, Don't Abandon, Jus Sanguinis: Scott Titshaw -- Abolishing Ius Sanguinis Citizenship: A Proposal Too Restrained and Too Radical: Kristin Collins -- Citizenship Without Magic: Lois Harder -- The Janus-Face of Ius Sanguinis: Protecting Migrant Children and Expanding Ethnic Nations: Francesca Decimo -- The Prior Question: What Do We Need State Citizenship for?: David Owen -- No More Blood: Kerry Abrams -- Law by Blood or Blood by Law?: David de Groot -- Limiting the Transmission of Family Advantage: Ius Sanguinis with an Expiration Date: Iseult Honohan -- Retain Ius Sanguinis, but Don't Take It Literally!: Eva Ersbøll -- Distributing Some, but Not All Rights of Citizenship According to Ius Sanguinis: Ana Tanasoca -- Learning from Naturalisation Debates: The Right to an Appropriate Citizenship at Birth: Katja Swider and Caia Vlieks -- Don't Put the Baby in the Dirty Bathwater! A Rejoinder: Costica Dumbrava -- Part III: The Return of Banishment: The Return of Banishment: Do the New Denationalisation Policies Weaken Citizenship?:Audrey Macklin -- Terrorist Expatriation: All Show, No Byte, No Future: Peter J. Spiro -- Should Those Who Attack the Nation Have an Absolute Right to Remain Its Citizens?: Peter H. Schuck -- Terrorists Repudiate Their Own Citizenship: Christian Joppke -- It's not About Their Citizenship, it's About Ours: Vesco Paskalev -- You Can't Lose What You Haven't Got: Citizenship Acquisition and Loss in Africa: Bronwen Manby -- Revocation of Citizenship of Terrorists: A Matter of Political Expediency: Kay Hailbronner -- Whose Bad Guys Are Terrorists?: Rainer Bauböck -- Human Rights for All Is Better than Citizenship Rights for Some: Daniel Kanstroom -- Denationalisation, Assassination, Territory: Some (U.S.-Prompted) Reflections: Linda Bosniak -- Beware States Piercing Holes Into Citizenship: Matthew J. Gibney -- Disowning Citizens: Reuven (Ruvi) Ziegler -- Our Epoch's Little Banishments: Saskia Sassen -- Deprivation of Citizenship: Is There an Issue of EU Law?: Jo Shaw -- On Producing the Alien Within: A Reply: Audrey Macklin -- Part IV: Cloud Communities: Cloud Communities: The Dawn of Global Citizenship?: Liav Orgad -- Citizenship in Cloud Cuckoo Land?: Rainer Bauböck -- Citizenship in the Era of Blockchain-Based Virtual Nations: Primavera De Filippi -- Global Citizenship for the Stay-at-Homes: Francesca Strumia -- A World Without Law; A World Without Politics: Robert Post -- Virtual Politics, Real Guns: On Cloud Community, Violence, and Human Rights: Michael Blake -- A World Wide Web of Citizenship; Peter J. Spiro -- Citizenship Forecast: Partly Cloudy with Chances of Algorithms: Costica Dumbrava -- The Separation of Territory and State: a Digital French Revolution?: Yussef Al Tamimi -- A Brave New Dawn? Digital Cakes, Cloudy Governance and Citizenship á la Carte: Jelena Dzankic -- Old Divides New Devices: Global Citizenship for Only Half of the World: Lea Ypi -- Escapist Technology in the Service of Neo-Feudalism: Dimitry Kochenov -- Cloud Communities and the Materiality of the Digital: Stefania Milan -- Cloud Agoras: When Blockchain Technology Meets Arendt's Virtual Public Spaces, : Dora Kostakopoulou -- Global Cryptodemocracy Is Possible and Desirable: Ehud Shapiro -- The Future of Citizenship: Global and Digital -- A Rejoinder: Liav Orgad.
    Additional Edition: Print version: ISBN 9783319927183
    Additional Edition: Print version: ISBN 9783319927206
    Language: English
    URL: OAPEN
    URL: OAPEN
    URL: OAPEN  (Creative Commons License)
    URL: Image  (Thumbnail cover image)
    URL: Image  (Thumbnail cover image)
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing :
    UID:
    almahu_9948148273902882
    Format: XXI, 358 p. 1 illus. , online resource.
    Edition: 1st ed. 2018.
    ISBN: 9783319927190
    Series Statement: IMISCOE Research Series,
    Content: This open access book discusses how national citizenship is being transformed by economic, social and political change. It focuses on the emergence of global markets where citizenship is for sale and on how new reproduction technologies impact citizenship by descent. It also discusses the return of banishment through denationalisation of terrorist suspects, and the impact of digital technologies, such as blockchain, on the future of democratic citizenship. The book provides a wide range of views on these issues from legal scholars, political scientists, and political practitioners. It is structured as a series of four conversations in which authors respond to each other. This exchange of arguments provides unique depth to current debates about the future of citizenship. .
    Note: Part I: Should Citizenship Be for Sale?: Summary: Global, European and National Questions About the Price of Citizenship: Rainer Bauböck -- Dangerous Liaisons: Money and Citizenship: Ayelet Shachar -- Cash-for-Passports and the End of Citizenship: Peter J. Spiro -- Citizenship for Those who Invest into the Future of the State Is not Wrong, the Price Is the Problem: Raul Magni Berton -- The Price of Selling Citizenship: Chris Armstrong -- Global Mobility Corridors for the Ultra-Rich. The Neoliberal Transformation of Citizenship: Roxana Barbulescu -- The Maltese Falcon, or: my Porsche for a Passport!: Jelena Dzankic -- What Is Wrong with Selling Citizenship? It Corrupts Democracy!: Rainer Bauböck -- What Money Can’t Buy: Face-to-Face Cooperation and Local Democratic Life: Paulina Ochoa Espejo -- If You Do not Like Selling Passports, Give Them for Free to Those who Deserve them: Vesco Paskalev -- Citizenship for Real: Its Hypocrisy, Its Randomness, Its Price: Dimitry Kochenov -- Trading Citizenship, Human Capital and the European Union: David Owen -- Citizenship for Sale: Could and Should the EU Intervene?: Jo Shaw -- Linking Citizenship to Income Undermines European Values. We Need Shared Criteria and Guidelines for Access to EU Citizenship: Hannes Swoboda -- Coda : Ayelet Shachar -- Part II: Bloodlines and Belonging: Bloodlines and Belonging: Time to Abandon Ius Sanguinis?: Costica Dumbrava -- Ius Filiationis: A Defence of Citizenship by Descent: Rainer Bauböck -- Tainted Law? Why History Cannot Provide the Justification for Abandoning Ius Sanguinis: Jannis Panagiotidis -- Family Matters: Modernise, Don’t Abandon, Jus Sanguinis: Scott Titshaw -- Abolishing Ius Sanguinis Citizenship: A Proposal Too Restrained and Too Radical: Kristin Collins -- Citizenship Without Magic: Lois Harder -- The Janus-Face of Ius Sanguinis: Protecting Migrant Children and Expanding Ethnic Nations: Francesca Decimo -- The Prior Question: What Do We Need State Citizenship for?: David Owen -- No More Blood: Kerry Abrams -- Law by Blood or Blood by Law?: David de Groot -- Limiting the Transmission of Family Advantage: Ius Sanguinis with an Expiration Date: Iseult Honohan -- Retain Ius Sanguinis, but Don’t Take It Literally!: Eva Ersbøll -- Distributing Some, but Not All Rights of Citizenship According to Ius Sanguinis: Ana Tanasoca -- Learning from Naturalisation Debates: The Right to an Appropriate Citizenship at Birth: Katja Swider and Caia Vlieks -- Don’t Put the Baby in the Dirty Bathwater! A Rejoinder: Costica Dumbrava -- Part III: The Return of Banishment: The Return of Banishment: Do the New Denationalisation Policies Weaken Citizenship?:Audrey Macklin -- Terrorist Expatriation: All Show, No Byte, No Future: Peter J. Spiro -- Should Those Who Attack the Nation Have an Absolute Right to Remain Its Citizens?: Peter H. Schuck -- Terrorists Repudiate Their Own Citizenship: Christian Joppke -- It’s not About Their Citizenship, it’s About Ours: Vesco Paskalev -- You Can’t Lose What You Haven’t Got: Citizenship Acquisition and Loss in Africa: Bronwen Manby -- Revocation of Citizenship of Terrorists: A Matter of Political Expediency: Kay Hailbronner -- Whose Bad Guys Are Terrorists?: Rainer Bauböck -- Human Rights for All Is Better than Citizenship Rights for Some: Daniel Kanstroom -- Denationalisation, Assassination, Territory: Some (U.S.-Prompted) Reflections: Linda Bosniak -- Beware States Piercing Holes Into Citizenship: Matthew J. Gibney -- Disowning Citizens: Reuven (Ruvi) Ziegler -- Our Epoch’s Little Banishments: Saskia Sassen -- Deprivation of Citizenship: Is There an Issue of EU Law?: Jo Shaw -- On Producing the Alien Within: A Reply: Audrey Macklin -- Part IV: Cloud Communities: Cloud Communities: The Dawn of Global Citizenship?: Liav Orgad -- Citizenship in Cloud Cuckoo Land?: Rainer Bauböck -- Citizenship in the Era of Blockchain-Based Virtual Nations: Primavera De Filippi -- Global Citizenship for the Stay-at-Homes: Francesca Strumia -- A World Without Law; A World Without Politics: Robert Post -- Virtual Politics, Real Guns: On Cloud Community, Violence, and Human Rights: Michael Blake -- A World Wide Web of Citizenship; Peter J. Spiro -- Citizenship Forecast: Partly Cloudy with Chances of Algorithms: Costica Dumbrava -- The Separation of Territory and State: a Digital French Revolution?: Yussef Al Tamimi -- A Brave New Dawn? Digital Cakes, Cloudy Governance and Citizenship á la Carte: Jelena Dzankic -- Old Divides New Devices: Global Citizenship for Only Half of the World: Lea Ypi -- Escapist Technology in the Service of Neo-Feudalism: Dimitry Kochenov -- Cloud Communities and the Materiality of the Digital: Stefania Milan -- Cloud Agoras: When Blockchain Technology Meets Arendt’s Virtual Public Spaces,: Dora Kostakopoulou -- Global Cryptodemocracy Is Possible and Desirable: Ehud Shapiro -- The Future of Citizenship: Global and Digital – A Rejoinder: Liav Orgad. .
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9783319927183
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9783319927206
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9783030065003
    Language: English
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing AG,
    UID:
    almahu_9949602163702882
    Format: 1 online resource (341 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783319927190
    Series Statement: IMISCOE Research Series
    Note: Intro -- Acknowledgements -- Preface -- Contents -- About the Editor -- Contributors -- Part I: Should Citizenship Be for Sale? -- Summary: Global, European and National Questions About the Price of Citizenship -- (1) Global questions -- (2) European questions -- (3) National questions -- Dangerous Liaisons: Money and Citizenship -- Cash-for-Passports and the End of Citizenship -- Citizenship for Those who Invest into the Future of the State is Not Wrong, the Price Is the Problem -- The Price of Selling Citizenship -- Global Mobility Corridors for the Ultra-Rich. The Neoliberal Transformation of Citizenship -- The Maltese Falcon, or: my Porsche for a Passport! -- What Is Wrong with Selling Citizenship? It Corrupts Democracy! -- What Money Can't Buy: Face-to-Face Cooperation and Local Democratic Life -- If You Do not Like Selling Passports, Give Them for Free to Those Who Deserve Them -- Citizenship for Real: Its Hypocrisy, Its Randomness, Its Price -- I. -- II. -- III. -- IV. -- V. -- Trading Citizenship, Human Capital and the European Union -- Citizenship for Sale: Could and Should the  EU Intervene? -- Linking Citizenship to Income Undermines European Values. We Need Shared Criteria and Guidelines for Access to EU Citizenship -- Coda -- Part II: Bloodlines and Belonging -- Bloodlines and Belonging: Time to Abandon Ius Sanguinis? -- Tainted -- Inadequate -- Unnecessary -- Ius Filiationis: A defence of Citizenship by Descent -- Not the only one tainted -- Why not ius filiationis? -- Don't abandon the children! -- Delayed citizenship for all? -- Citizenship across generations -- Tainted Law? Why History Cannot provide the Justification for Abandoning Ius Sanguinis -- Tainted by history? -- Not all types of 'descent' are the same -- Co-ethnic citizenship is a different story -- Conclusion -- Family Matters: Modernise, Don't Abandon, Ius Sanguinis. , In a mobile world children need their parents' citizenship -- ART requires fixing family and citizenship law -- Abolishing Ius Sanguinis Citizenship: A Proposal Too Restrained and Too Radical -- The complex history of ius sanguinis citizenship -- A proposal too restrained and too radical -- How to modernise? -- Citizenship Without Magic -- The Janus-Face of Ius Sanguinis: Protecting Migrant Children and Expanding Ethnic Nations -- The Prior Question: What Do We Need State Citizenship for? -- No More Blood -- Law by Blood or Blood by Law? -- The main purposes of nationality -- Non-solidarity of states -- Limiting the Transmission of Family Advantage: Ius Sanguinis with an  Expiration Date -- Protecting families but not privilege -- Provisional ius sanguinis -- Retain Ius Sanguinis, but Don't Take it Literally! -- History is not an argument -- Unity of the family -- Ius filiationis benefits -- Human rights protection at this stage -- Other ways to protect parent-child relationship -- A need for international guidelines on legal recognition of parenthood -- Distributing Some, but Not All, Rights of  Citizenship According to Ius Sanguinis -- The problem of making citizenship dependent on family ties -- Limiting the scope of ius sanguinis -- Learning from Naturalisation Debates: The Right to an Appropriate Citizenship at Birth -- Don't Put the Baby in the Dirty Bathwater! A Rejoinder -- How ethnic is ius sanguinis and why does it matter? -- Why bother fixing ius sanguinis? -- Preventing statelessness -- Protecting family life -- Expressing social identity -- Opportunities for intergenerational membership -- Part III: The Return of Banishment -- The Return of Banishment: Do the New Denationalisation Policies Weaken Citizenship? -- Terrorist Expatriation: All Show, No Bite, No Future. , Should Those Who Attack the Nation Have an Absolute Right to Remain Its Citizens? -- Terrorists Repudiate Their Own Citizenship -- It's Not About Their Citizenship, it's About Ours -- You Can't Lose What You Haven't Got: Citizenship Acquisition and Loss in Africa -- The legal provisions -- The practice -- Revocation of Citizenship of Terrorists: A Matter of Political Expediency -- Whose Bad Guys Are Terrorists? -- Human Rights for All Is Better than Citizenship Rights for Some -- Denationalisation, Assassination, Territory: Some (U.S.-Prompted) Reflections -- Beware States Piercing Holes into Citizenship -- Disowning Citizens -- Our Epoch's Little Banishments -- Deprivation of Citizenship: Is There an Issue of EU Law? -- On Producing the Alien Within: A Reply -- Part IV: Cloud Communities -- Cloud Communities: The Dawn of Global Citizenship? -- The idea of global citizenship -- Status: international legal persona -- Digital identity: blockchain technology -- Political participation: 'Cloud Communities' -- The future of citizenship: dynamic and multilayered? -- Citizenship in Cloud Cuckoo Land? -- The progressive potential: providing global legal status and enabling global civil society -- The threat to democracy: should we be ruled by voluntary associations? -- Citizenship in the Era of Blockchain-Based Virtual Nations -- Multiple shades of activism -- Beyond the blockchain -- Blockchain-based virtual nations -- Competing sovereignties -- New opportunities for experimentation -- Global Citizenship for the Stay-at-Homes -- A network model of citizenship -- More room for consensual citizenship -- A citizen's stake beyond national borders -- Global citizenship for the stay-at-homes -- A World Without Law -- A World Without Politics -- Virtual Politics, Real Guns: On Cloud Community, Violence, and Human Rights -- A World Wide Web of Citizenship. , The false dichotomies of political community -- Corroded Leviathan -- Citizenship Forecast: Partly Cloudy with Chances of Algorithms -- The Separation of Territory and State: a Digital French Revolution? -- Assumption 1: Cloud states have no territory -- Assumption 2: Cloud states cannot exert violence -- Assumption 3: Cloud state membership is based on choice -- A Brave New Dawn? Digital Cakes, Cloudy Governance and Citizenship á la Carte -- They want citizenship? Let them have digital identities instead! -- Governance by blockchain: digital hierarchies or direct democracy? -- Citizenship as a business model? -- Old Divides, New Devices: Global Citizenship for Only Half of the World -- Escapist Technology in the Service of Neo-Feudalism -- Cloud Communities and the Materiality of the Digital -- Three problems with Orgad's argument -- Self-governance in practice: A cautionary tale -- Why not (yet?): On new divides and bad players -- Cloud Agoras: When Blockchain Technology Meets Arendt's Virtual Public Spaces -- Global Cryptodemocracy Is Possible and Desirable -- The Future of Citizenship: Global and Digital - A Rejoinder -- Cloud computing -- Political community -- Digital coercion -- Functional sovereignty -- Coda.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Bauböck, Rainer Debating Transformations of National Citizenship Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2018 ISBN 9783319927183
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books.
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham : Springer Nature | Cham :Springer International Publishing :
    UID:
    edoccha_9958959780002883
    Format: 1 online resource (XXI, 358 p.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 2018.
    ISBN: 3-319-92719-1
    Series Statement: IMISCOE Research Series,
    Content: This open access book discusses how national citizenship is being transformed by economic, social and political change. It focuses on the emergence of global markets where citizenship is for sale and on how new reproduction technologies impact citizenship by descent. It also discusses the return of banishment through denationalisation of terrorist suspects, and the impact of digital technologies, such as blockchain, on the future of democratic citizenship. The book provides a wide range of views on these issues from legal scholars, political scientists, and political practitioners. It is structured as a series of four conversations in which authors respond to each other. This exchange of arguments provides unique depth to current debates about the future of citizenship. .
    Note: Part I: Should Citizenship Be for Sale?: Summary: Global, European and National Questions About the Price of Citizenship: Rainer Bauböck -- Dangerous Liaisons: Money and Citizenship: Ayelet Shachar -- Cash-for-Passports and the End of Citizenship: Peter J. Spiro -- Citizenship for Those who Invest into the Future of the State Is not Wrong, the Price Is the Problem: Raul Magni Berton -- The Price of Selling Citizenship: Chris Armstrong -- Global Mobility Corridors for the Ultra-Rich. The Neoliberal Transformation of Citizenship: Roxana Barbulescu -- The Maltese Falcon, or: my Porsche for a Passport!: Jelena Dzankic -- What Is Wrong with Selling Citizenship? It Corrupts Democracy!: Rainer Bauböck -- What Money Can’t Buy: Face-to-Face Cooperation and Local Democratic Life: Paulina Ochoa Espejo -- If You Do not Like Selling Passports, Give Them for Free to Those who Deserve them: Vesco Paskalev -- Citizenship for Real: Its Hypocrisy, Its Randomness, Its Price: Dimitry Kochenov -- Trading Citizenship, Human Capital and the European Union: David Owen -- Citizenship for Sale: Could and Should the EU Intervene?: Jo Shaw -- Linking Citizenship to Income Undermines European Values. We Need Shared Criteria and Guidelines for Access to EU Citizenship: Hannes Swoboda -- Coda : Ayelet Shachar -- Part II: Bloodlines and Belonging: Bloodlines and Belonging: Time to Abandon Ius Sanguinis?: Costica Dumbrava -- Ius Filiationis: A Defence of Citizenship by Descent: Rainer Bauböck -- Tainted Law? Why History Cannot Provide the Justification for Abandoning Ius Sanguinis: Jannis Panagiotidis -- Family Matters: Modernise, Don’t Abandon, Jus Sanguinis: Scott Titshaw -- Abolishing Ius Sanguinis Citizenship: A Proposal Too Restrained and Too Radical: Kristin Collins -- Citizenship Without Magic: Lois Harder -- The Janus-Face of Ius Sanguinis: Protecting Migrant Children and Expanding Ethnic Nations: Francesca Decimo -- The Prior Question: What Do We Need State Citizenship for?: David Owen -- No More Blood: Kerry Abrams -- Law by Blood or Blood by Law?: David de Groot -- Limiting the Transmission of Family Advantage: Ius Sanguinis with an Expiration Date: Iseult Honohan -- Retain Ius Sanguinis, but Don’t Take It Literally!: Eva Ersbøll -- Distributing Some, but Not All Rights of Citizenship According to Ius Sanguinis: Ana Tanasoca -- Learning from Naturalisation Debates: The Right to an Appropriate Citizenship at Birth: Katja Swider and Caia Vlieks -- Don’t Put the Baby in the Dirty Bathwater! A Rejoinder: Costica Dumbrava -- Part III: The Return of Banishment: The Return of Banishment: Do the New Denationalisation Policies Weaken Citizenship?:Audrey Macklin -- Terrorist Expatriation: All Show, No Byte, No Future: Peter J. Spiro -- Should Those Who Attack the Nation Have an Absolute Right to Remain Its Citizens?: Peter H. Schuck -- Terrorists Repudiate Their Own Citizenship: Christian Joppke -- It’s not About Their Citizenship, it’s About Ours: Vesco Paskalev -- You Can’t Lose What You Haven’t Got: Citizenship Acquisition and Loss in Africa: Bronwen Manby -- Revocation of Citizenship of Terrorists: A Matter of Political Expediency: Kay Hailbronner -- Whose Bad Guys Are Terrorists?: Rainer Bauböck -- Human Rights for All Is Better than Citizenship Rights for Some: Daniel Kanstroom -- Denationalisation, Assassination, Territory: Some (U.S.-Prompted) Reflections: Linda Bosniak -- Beware States Piercing Holes Into Citizenship: Matthew J. Gibney -- Disowning Citizens: Reuven (Ruvi) Ziegler -- Our Epoch’s Little Banishments: Saskia Sassen -- Deprivation of Citizenship: Is There an Issue of EU Law?: Jo Shaw -- On Producing the Alien Within: A Reply: Audrey Macklin -- Part IV: Cloud Communities: Cloud Communities: The Dawn of Global Citizenship?: Liav Orgad -- Citizenship in Cloud Cuckoo Land?: Rainer Bauböck -- Citizenship in the Era of Blockchain-Based Virtual Nations: Primavera De Filippi -- Global Citizenship for the Stay-at-Homes: Francesca Strumia -- A World Without Law; A World Without Politics: Robert Post -- Virtual Politics, Real Guns: On Cloud Community, Violence, and Human Rights: Michael Blake -- A World Wide Web of Citizenship; Peter J. Spiro -- Citizenship Forecast: Partly Cloudy with Chances of Algorithms: Costica Dumbrava -- The Separation of Territory and State: a Digital French Revolution?: Yussef Al Tamimi -- A Brave New Dawn? Digital Cakes, Cloudy Governance and Citizenship á la Carte: Jelena Dzankic -- Old Divides New Devices: Global Citizenship for Only Half of the World: Lea Ypi -- Escapist Technology in the Service of Neo-Feudalism: Dimitry Kochenov -- Cloud Communities and the Materiality of the Digital: Stefania Milan -- Cloud Agoras: When Blockchain Technology Meets Arendt’s Virtual Public Spaces,: Dora Kostakopoulou -- Global Cryptodemocracy Is Possible and Desirable: Ehud Shapiro -- The Future of Citizenship: Global and Digital – A Rejoinder: Liav Orgad. . , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3-319-92718-3
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham : Springer Nature | Cham :Springer International Publishing :
    UID:
    edocfu_9958959780002883
    Format: 1 online resource (XXI, 358 p.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 2018.
    ISBN: 3-319-92719-1
    Series Statement: IMISCOE Research Series,
    Content: This open access book discusses how national citizenship is being transformed by economic, social and political change. It focuses on the emergence of global markets where citizenship is for sale and on how new reproduction technologies impact citizenship by descent. It also discusses the return of banishment through denationalisation of terrorist suspects, and the impact of digital technologies, such as blockchain, on the future of democratic citizenship. The book provides a wide range of views on these issues from legal scholars, political scientists, and political practitioners. It is structured as a series of four conversations in which authors respond to each other. This exchange of arguments provides unique depth to current debates about the future of citizenship. .
    Note: Part I: Should Citizenship Be for Sale?: Summary: Global, European and National Questions About the Price of Citizenship: Rainer Bauböck -- Dangerous Liaisons: Money and Citizenship: Ayelet Shachar -- Cash-for-Passports and the End of Citizenship: Peter J. Spiro -- Citizenship for Those who Invest into the Future of the State Is not Wrong, the Price Is the Problem: Raul Magni Berton -- The Price of Selling Citizenship: Chris Armstrong -- Global Mobility Corridors for the Ultra-Rich. The Neoliberal Transformation of Citizenship: Roxana Barbulescu -- The Maltese Falcon, or: my Porsche for a Passport!: Jelena Dzankic -- What Is Wrong with Selling Citizenship? It Corrupts Democracy!: Rainer Bauböck -- What Money Can’t Buy: Face-to-Face Cooperation and Local Democratic Life: Paulina Ochoa Espejo -- If You Do not Like Selling Passports, Give Them for Free to Those who Deserve them: Vesco Paskalev -- Citizenship for Real: Its Hypocrisy, Its Randomness, Its Price: Dimitry Kochenov -- Trading Citizenship, Human Capital and the European Union: David Owen -- Citizenship for Sale: Could and Should the EU Intervene?: Jo Shaw -- Linking Citizenship to Income Undermines European Values. We Need Shared Criteria and Guidelines for Access to EU Citizenship: Hannes Swoboda -- Coda : Ayelet Shachar -- Part II: Bloodlines and Belonging: Bloodlines and Belonging: Time to Abandon Ius Sanguinis?: Costica Dumbrava -- Ius Filiationis: A Defence of Citizenship by Descent: Rainer Bauböck -- Tainted Law? Why History Cannot Provide the Justification for Abandoning Ius Sanguinis: Jannis Panagiotidis -- Family Matters: Modernise, Don’t Abandon, Jus Sanguinis: Scott Titshaw -- Abolishing Ius Sanguinis Citizenship: A Proposal Too Restrained and Too Radical: Kristin Collins -- Citizenship Without Magic: Lois Harder -- The Janus-Face of Ius Sanguinis: Protecting Migrant Children and Expanding Ethnic Nations: Francesca Decimo -- The Prior Question: What Do We Need State Citizenship for?: David Owen -- No More Blood: Kerry Abrams -- Law by Blood or Blood by Law?: David de Groot -- Limiting the Transmission of Family Advantage: Ius Sanguinis with an Expiration Date: Iseult Honohan -- Retain Ius Sanguinis, but Don’t Take It Literally!: Eva Ersbøll -- Distributing Some, but Not All Rights of Citizenship According to Ius Sanguinis: Ana Tanasoca -- Learning from Naturalisation Debates: The Right to an Appropriate Citizenship at Birth: Katja Swider and Caia Vlieks -- Don’t Put the Baby in the Dirty Bathwater! A Rejoinder: Costica Dumbrava -- Part III: The Return of Banishment: The Return of Banishment: Do the New Denationalisation Policies Weaken Citizenship?:Audrey Macklin -- Terrorist Expatriation: All Show, No Byte, No Future: Peter J. Spiro -- Should Those Who Attack the Nation Have an Absolute Right to Remain Its Citizens?: Peter H. Schuck -- Terrorists Repudiate Their Own Citizenship: Christian Joppke -- It’s not About Their Citizenship, it’s About Ours: Vesco Paskalev -- You Can’t Lose What You Haven’t Got: Citizenship Acquisition and Loss in Africa: Bronwen Manby -- Revocation of Citizenship of Terrorists: A Matter of Political Expediency: Kay Hailbronner -- Whose Bad Guys Are Terrorists?: Rainer Bauböck -- Human Rights for All Is Better than Citizenship Rights for Some: Daniel Kanstroom -- Denationalisation, Assassination, Territory: Some (U.S.-Prompted) Reflections: Linda Bosniak -- Beware States Piercing Holes Into Citizenship: Matthew J. Gibney -- Disowning Citizens: Reuven (Ruvi) Ziegler -- Our Epoch’s Little Banishments: Saskia Sassen -- Deprivation of Citizenship: Is There an Issue of EU Law?: Jo Shaw -- On Producing the Alien Within: A Reply: Audrey Macklin -- Part IV: Cloud Communities: Cloud Communities: The Dawn of Global Citizenship?: Liav Orgad -- Citizenship in Cloud Cuckoo Land?: Rainer Bauböck -- Citizenship in the Era of Blockchain-Based Virtual Nations: Primavera De Filippi -- Global Citizenship for the Stay-at-Homes: Francesca Strumia -- A World Without Law; A World Without Politics: Robert Post -- Virtual Politics, Real Guns: On Cloud Community, Violence, and Human Rights: Michael Blake -- A World Wide Web of Citizenship; Peter J. Spiro -- Citizenship Forecast: Partly Cloudy with Chances of Algorithms: Costica Dumbrava -- The Separation of Territory and State: a Digital French Revolution?: Yussef Al Tamimi -- A Brave New Dawn? Digital Cakes, Cloudy Governance and Citizenship á la Carte: Jelena Dzankic -- Old Divides New Devices: Global Citizenship for Only Half of the World: Lea Ypi -- Escapist Technology in the Service of Neo-Feudalism: Dimitry Kochenov -- Cloud Communities and the Materiality of the Digital: Stefania Milan -- Cloud Agoras: When Blockchain Technology Meets Arendt’s Virtual Public Spaces,: Dora Kostakopoulou -- Global Cryptodemocracy Is Possible and Desirable: Ehud Shapiro -- The Future of Citizenship: Global and Digital – A Rejoinder: Liav Orgad. . , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3-319-92718-3
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham, Switzerland :Springer Open,
    UID:
    edocfu_BV045274613
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (xxi, 358 Seiten).
    ISBN: 978-3-319-92719-0
    Series Statement: IMISCOE research series
    Note: Open Access
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-319-92718-3
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-319-92720-6
    Language: English
    Subjects: Law
    RVK:
    Keywords: Staatsangehörigkeit ; Staatsangehörigkeitsrecht ; Aufsatzsammlung
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    Author information: Bauböck, Rainer 1953-
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 10
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham, Switzerland :Springer Open,
    UID:
    edoccha_BV045274613
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (xxi, 358 Seiten).
    ISBN: 978-3-319-92719-0
    Series Statement: IMISCOE research series
    Note: Open Access
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-319-92718-3
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 978-3-319-92720-6
    Language: English
    Subjects: Law
    RVK:
    Keywords: Staatsangehörigkeit ; Staatsangehörigkeitsrecht ; Aufsatzsammlung
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    Author information: Bauböck, Rainer 1953-
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
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