All posts tagged: Citizenship

Flags

Brexit Will Fuel Citizenship Arbitrage

The unexpected result in the British referendum is hitting the news today like a thunderclap. As the financial markets tumble, few will escape Brexit’s consequences. But none will feel Brexit more than those whose employment and residential security have been contingent on the UK’s continued EU membership. An estimated 3 million citizens of other EU member states live in the UK. Meanwhile, 1.3 million Brits live in other EU member states. For this population, Brexit spells uncertainty, at least. No more will moving across the Channel for work, study, and other purposes be almost as easy as moving across the Hudson River from New York to New Jersey. Getting another nationality will in many cases be the answer. Think citizenship insurance. Free movement rights formerly guaranteed under the EU treaty regime will be up for grabs. Those who are allowed to stay will face visa applications, registration regimes, and other bureaucratic hassles. Others may face expulsion. As EU citizens – a status that comes with citizenship in an EU member state — these individuals have …

Passports

Stuck With Two Passports

As it is wont to every few years, dual citizenship has become a contentious issue in contemporary politics. In the wake of the November 2015 attacks in Paris, French President François Hollande is pressing for a constitutional amendment that would allow convicted terrorists with dual nationality to be stripped of their French citizenship. Political elites on the French left have attacked the proposal as violating principles of equality, as it does not apply to citizens of only France; the move, they argue, would signify that dual nationals are somehow less French and that their French identity is more expendable than those who don’t have another citizenship. In December the U.S. Congress barred dual nationals of Iran, Syria, Iraq and Sudan from visa exemptions that they would otherwise enjoy as citizens of European Union nations and certain other countries. The measure — which a group of senators is now proposing to alter — also restricts the visa-free movement of individuals who have recently traveled to these countries, on the theory that it would prevent potential jihadists from re-entering the …