The rise and fall of the breadwinner citizen, as reflected in Dutch and EU migration law
<p>This article first analyses the assumptions concerning the family and its relationship to the state, as well as linked assumptions concerning citizenship, that underlie current Dutch family migration policies (including the recent proposals for new restrictive measures). It &...
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Amsterdam Law Forum
2011
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oai:doaj.org-article:4339c59ff3c94c42ba458052faeffc832021-12-02T06:58:57ZThe rise and fall of the breadwinner citizen, as reflected in Dutch and EU migration law1876-8156https://doaj.org/article/4339c59ff3c94c42ba458052faeffc832011-05-01T00:00:00Zhttp://ojs.ubvu.vu.nl/alf/article/view/206https://doaj.org/toc/1876-8156<p>This article first analyses the assumptions concerning the family and its relationship to the state, as well as linked assumptions concerning citizenship, that underlie current Dutch family migration policies (including the recent proposals for new restrictive measures). It &nbsp;next compares the national with the EU perspective on family, (welfare) state and citizenship, considers to what degree these differ, and reflects on what, in the process of harmonising family migration policies, might be at stake in terms of social relations within the EU.&nbsp;</p>Sarah van WalsumAmsterdam Law ForumarticleLawKENAmsterdam Law Forum, Vol 3, Iss 2, Pp 62-71 (2011) |
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Law K Sarah van Walsum The rise and fall of the breadwinner citizen, as reflected in Dutch and EU migration law |
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<p>This article first analyses the assumptions concerning the family and its relationship to the state, as well as linked assumptions concerning citizenship, that underlie current Dutch family migration policies (including the recent proposals for new restrictive measures). It &nbsp;next compares the national with the EU perspective on family, (welfare) state and citizenship, considers to what degree these differ, and reflects on what, in the process of harmonising family migration policies, might be at stake in terms of social relations within the EU.&nbsp;</p> |
format |
article |
author |
Sarah van Walsum |
author_facet |
Sarah van Walsum |
author_sort |
Sarah van Walsum |
title |
The rise and fall of the breadwinner citizen, as reflected in Dutch and EU migration law |
title_short |
The rise and fall of the breadwinner citizen, as reflected in Dutch and EU migration law |
title_full |
The rise and fall of the breadwinner citizen, as reflected in Dutch and EU migration law |
title_fullStr |
The rise and fall of the breadwinner citizen, as reflected in Dutch and EU migration law |
title_full_unstemmed |
The rise and fall of the breadwinner citizen, as reflected in Dutch and EU migration law |
title_sort |
rise and fall of the breadwinner citizen, as reflected in dutch and eu migration law |
publisher |
Amsterdam Law Forum |
publishDate |
2011 |
url |
https://doaj.org/article/4339c59ff3c94c42ba458052faeffc83 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT sarahvanwalsum theriseandfallofthebreadwinnercitizenasreflectedindutchandeumigrationlaw AT sarahvanwalsum riseandfallofthebreadwinnercitizenasreflectedindutchandeumigrationlaw |
_version_ |
1718399627297816576 |