The Politics of Mobile Citizenship in Europe
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The Politics of Mobile Citizenship in Europe

Nora Siklodi

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The Politics of Mobile Citizenship in Europe

Nora Siklodi

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The Politics of Mobile Citizenship in Europe explores contemporary models of national and European Union (EU) citizenship in the context of intra-EU mobility. Scholars have often addressed these models from separate disciplinary standpoints. National citizenship has been studied through the prism of citizenship studies and EU citizenship from an EU studies viewpoint. To contribute to their ongoing discussion and offer a politically embedded perspective, Siklodi applies the citizenship studies lens to the analysis of EU-wide survey data and original focus group evidence of young and highly educated EU mobiles and stayers in Sweden and Britain. Specifically, she investigates political community building processes, including processes of differentiation and exclusion, and the dimensions of citizenship – identity, rights and participation – at the national and EU levels. Siklodi proposes a redefinition of the active/passive citizen dichotomy in terms of mobiles/stayers to providea more accurate description of contemporary citizen attitudes and behaviours across the European community.

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Información

Año
2020
ISBN
9783030490515
© The Author(s) 2020
N. SiklodiThe Politics of Mobile Citizenship in EuropePolitics of Citizenship and Migrationhttps://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-49051-5_1
Begin Abstract

1. Introduction: The Politics of Contemporary Citizenship: What’s Going On?

Nora Siklodi1, 2
(1)
Politics and International Relations, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, Hampshire, UK
(2)
Visiting Fellow in Democracy and Citizenship in Education, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway
Nora Siklodi
End Abstract
In the light of heightened concern—especially among young people—with global challenges, from the climate emergency to widening income gaps, some of us might be tempted to believe that the time for a “one world community” is finally upon us. But, if we consider the only instance of a ‘global community’ so far—the European Union (EU)—we are likely to find a community where “all passports are equal, but some are more equal than others” (Castles 2005: 691, emphasis added). It is precisely this paradox which serves as the departure point for my book.
Specifically, this book investigates two related issues in the politics of contemporary citizenship. First, it examines the issue of community building processes, including differentiation and exclusion and the role assigned to and realised by citizens in the course of these processes. It is expected that these processes grant contemporary citizenship models their distinctively political function (Bosniak 2008; Isin and Nielsen 2008).
As we focus on the EU example, we notice that legal and policy discourses categorise citizens and non-citizens based on their intra-EU mobility status, country of origins and prospective economic contributions—in this order—and rather than merely on the basis of their nationality (Hansen and Hager 2010; O’Brien 2016). Accordingly, ‘first-class’ ‘Eurostars’—the EU-15 mobiles—visiting European and international students as well as high-flying economic migrants and highly skilled third country nationals (TCNs) seem to make up the most ‘desired’ segment of a novel EU community.1 The ‘second-class’ group, for now, refers to Central and Eastern European (CEE) mobiles. While desired for their potential economic contributions, they are projected as the principal members of the EU’s very own ‘welfare’ tourist flows. These two, intra-EU mobile groups expected to interact with national and nationalist stayers and, following the refugee crisis, third class individuals; the members of a growing number of asylum seekers and refugees. If we take the first two categories as evidence of an exciting EU community emerging, the last two undoubtedly highlight the continued relevance of national communities. To explore the informal ways in which the role of citizens and non-citizens are changing in the light of these arrangements, this book investigates young peoples’ experiences of their dual memberships in the budding EU (mobile) and their (home) national communities.
Second, the book turns to the addressing two models of citizenship as present in the EU today—the national and EU models. Accordingly, citizens from 28 member states (at the time of writing) are placed as part and parcel of an all-encompassing EU citizenry (at least from a formal, legal perspective), who enjoy distinct EU rights and entitlements. Under EU citizenship, these nationals are encouraged to move, study and reside freely across the EU—the ultimate confirmation of their ‘fundamental’ legal status as transnational citizens (Olsen 2012). In fact, EU citizenship seems to be all about intra-EU mobility. And EU mobile citizens are increasingly present. Yes, the actual number of member state nationals—‘active’ EU citizens—who embark on EU mobility might seem low, making up circa 3.4% of the EU’s total population (Eurostat 2019a). Yet even this number is larger than the population of 20 of the EU’s 28 member states and has grown exponentially, by nearly 290%, following the Eastern enlargement rounds in the mid-2000s (see Table 1.1). This number is also likely to be an underestimate, with temporary intra-EU mobility flows from cross-border shopping, holidays and seasonal work—all of which occur at a larger scale—notoriously difficult to trace (European Commission 2011).
Table 1.1
Intra-EU mobility per host country (2003–2018)
EU-25 movers
EU-27 Free movers
EU-28 Free movers
Year/Host country
2003
2004
2006
2007
2013
2014
2018
1
Germany
2,329,788
2,331,984
2,144,648
2,467,157
2,693,259
3,179,670
4,205,194
2
United Kingdom
1,009,591
1,030,820
1,280,000
1,456,900
2,456,864
2,624,313
3,860,237
3
Spain
519,027
621,750
854,761
1,634,597
2,060,653
1,991,093
1,930,905
4
Italy
167,124
189,998
223,537
606,188
1,240,157
1,441,706
1,562,147
5
France
1,237,849
1,110,000
1,299,028
1,407,901
1,466,185
1,542,653
6
Belgium
612,000
632,243
807,920
826,938
902,706
7
Austria
172,497
182,124
218,746
263,174
416,022
518,670
693,855
8
Netherlands
222,942
224,285
233,867
244,918
380,540
403,028
525,626
9
Ireland
351,874
396,954
406,062
434,988
10
Sweden
206,919
206,977
213,168
225,487
281,975
289,225
318,263
11
Luxembourg
155,000
170,940
206,119
214,390
244,400
12
Czech Republic
59,122
63,298
87,144
109,866
160,626
173,279
219,350
13
Denmark
66,550
71,994
81,219
147,075
160,014
213,465
14
Greece
88,000
157,700
196,114
192,642
211,155
15
Portugal
66,672
81,000
95,556
100,930
100,595
136,887
16
Cyprus
44,800
55,000
77,900
112,587
110,871
114,536
17
Finland
32,762
34,558
37,923
42,471
76,328
83,990
98,212
18
Hungary
17,347
24,879
101,046
79,835
80,817
77,998
19
Romania
19,528
20,618
56,750
20
Slovakia
12,202
14,041
19,218
55,909
45,174
55,949
21
Malta
12,846
15,210
38,563
22
Poland
23,928
26,162
27,710
30,098
23
Slovenia
1,829
1964
2540
3006
6925
16,318
19,540
24
Estonia
5000
6700
7707
7830
18,890
25
Croatia
8662
9816
16,598
26
Bulgaria
11,762
12,139
13,105
27
Latvia
3386
4407
6264
5590
6035
6192
28
Lithuania
2868
3200
3426
3491
3248
3711
6129
EU Total
6,032,376
5,036,264
7,516,674
10,080,871
13,3...

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