Citizenship and residence sales rethinking the boundaries of belonging

Citizenship and residence by investment is a fast-growing global phenomenon. As of 2022, more than a third of all countries in the world offered paths to membership in exchange for a donation or investment into their economies. Yet we know little about how these programmes operate and debates in aca...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Kochenov, Dimitry (Editor), Surak, Kristin (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cambridge, United Kingdom Cambridge University Press 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Cambridge Books Online - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction : learning from investment migration / Dimitry Kochenov and Kristin Surak
  • Investment migration : empirical developments in the field and methodological issues in its study / Kristin Surak, LSE, Department of Politics
  • Victims of citizenship : feudal statuses for sale in the hypocrisy republic / Dimitry Kochenov, CEU, Democracy Institute, Budapest and Department of Legal Studies, Vienna
  • Investment citizenship and state sovereignty in international law / Luuk van der Baaren, European University Institute, Florence, Robert Schuman Centre
  • Investment citizenship and the long leash of international law / Peter J. Spiro, Beasley School of Law, Temple University, Philadelphia
  • Relevant links : investment migration as an expression of national autonomy in matters of nationality / Petra Weingerl, University of Maribor, Faculty of Law And Matjaž Tratnik, University of Maribor, Faculty of Law
  • EU competence and investor migration / Daniel Sarmiento, Complutense University, Madrid, Faculty of Law And Martijn Van Den Brink, University of Oxford, Department of Politics and International Relations
  • Citizenship for sale in pre-modern Europe / Maarten Prak, Utrecht University, Economic and Social History
  • Unseemly, perhaps, but... : should citizenship be for sale? / John Torpey, City University of New York, Graduate Center
  • Citizenship by investment as instrumental citizenship / Christian Joppke, University of Bern, Department of Sociology
  • Unequal institutions in the Longue-Durée : citizenship through a Southern lens / Manuela Boatcă, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, Institute For Sociology
  • Citizenship and residence rights as vehicles of global inequality / Yossi Harpaz, Tel-Aviv University, Department of Sociology and Anthropology
  • The 'streetlight effect' in commentary on citizenship by investment / Suryapratim Roy, Trinity College Law School, Dublin
  • A blocked exchange? Investment migration and the limits of the commodification objection / Lior Erez, University of Haifa, Department of Political Science
  • Why do wealthy individuals migrate internationally : some economic considerations / Andres Solimano, International Center for Globalization and Development, Santiago De Chile
  • Can investor citizenship programs be a policy success? Madeline Sumption, University of Oxford, Compass Migration Observatory
  • Citizenship revocation and the normalisation of ex-post conditionality in investment migration law / Daniel Christopher Twomey, Graduate Student, Unitar, United Nations Institute for Training and Research, Geneva
  • In the shadow of the Euro crisis : foreign direct investment and investment migration programmes in the European Union / Justin Lindeboom, University of Groningen, Faculty of Law, Sophie Meunier, Princeton University, Princeton School of Public and International Affairs
  • Investment migration and corruption : the example of Hungary / Boldizsár Nagy, Ceu, Department of Politics, Vienna
  • Investment migration and the importance of due diligence : examples of Canada, Saint-Kitts and Nevis, and the EU / Mark Corrado, Community Safety Policy and Programmes at the City of Richmond, British Columbia, Canada and Kim Marsh, Kim Marsh Advisory
  • Investment migration and subnational jurisdictions / Godfrey Baldacchino, University of Prince Edward Island, Unesco co-Chair In Island Studies and University of Malta, Department of Sociology and Elena Basheska, CEU Democracy Institute, Budapest