The Existential Crisis of Citizenship of the European Union: The Argument for an Autonomous Status

Q1 Social Sciences
O. Garner
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Abstract This article argues for the (re)construction of citizenship of the European Union as an autonomous status. As opposed to the current legal regime, whereby individuals with nationality of a Member State are automatically granted citizenship of the Union, under this proposal individuals would be free to choose whether or not to adopt the status of citizen of an incipient European polity. At present, the telos and essence of citizenship of the Union is contested. It may be argued that the status is partial or incomplete. This has informed competing normative perspectives. ‘Maximalist’ positions praise the judicial construction of Union citizenship as destined to be the ‘fundamental status’ for all Member State nationals. By contrast, ‘minimalist’ positions argue that the status should remain ‘additional to’ Member State nationality, and the rights created therein should remain supplementary to the status and rights derived from national citizenship. This article will argue for a new approach to the dilemma. By emancipating the condition for acquisition of EU citizenship from nationality of a Member State, and reconstructing it as an autonomous choice for individuals, it is tentatively suggested that a new constitutional settlement for Europe may be generated.
欧盟公民身份的生存危机:自治地位之争
摘要本文主张(重建)欧盟公民身份作为一种自治地位。与目前拥有成员国国籍的个人自动被授予欧盟公民身份的法律制度不同,根据这一提议,个人可以自由选择是否采用欧洲初期政体的公民身份。目前,欧盟公民身份的本质和意义存在争议。可以说,这种状况是部分的或不完整的。这为相互竞争的规范观点提供了依据最高主义者的立场赞扬联邦公民身份的司法建设注定是所有成员国国民的“基本地位”。相比之下,“最低限度”的立场认为,该地位应继续“补充”成员国国籍,其中产生的权利应继续补充地位和源自国家公民身份的权利。这篇文章将为解决这一困境提出一种新的方法。通过将获得欧盟公民身份的条件从成员国国籍中解放出来,并将其重建为个人的自主选择,初步建议可以为欧洲产生新的宪法解决方案。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4
期刊介绍: The Cambridge Yearbook of European Legal Studies (CYELS) offers authors and readers a space for sustained reflection and conversation about the challenges facing Europe and the diverse legal contexts in which those challenges are addressed. It identifies European Legal Studies as a broad field of legal enquiry encompassing not only European Union law but also the law emanating from the Council of Europe; comparative European public and private law; and national law in its interaction with European legal sources. The Yearbook is a publication of the Centre for European Legal Studies, Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge.
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