Eurozenship: Pro and Contra
Published Working Paper
Orgad, Liav and Lepoutre, Jules (2019). Should EU Citizenship Be Disentangled from Member State Nationality? Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies Research Paper No. RSCAS 2019/24.
Kickoffs
Who Should Be a Citizen of the Union? Toward an Autonomous European Union Citizenship, by Dora Kostakopoulou
On Mushroom Reasoning and Kostakopoulou’s Argument for Eurozenship, by Richard Bellamy
Contributions
A Relative Dissociation of Union Citizenship From Member States Nationality Needs to Mean Something More Than Long-Term Residence Status, by Dimitris Christopoulos
The Case Against an Autonomous ‘EU Rump Citizenship’, by Daniel Thym
If You Want to Make EU Citizenship More Inclusive You Have to Reform Nationality Laws, by Rainer Bauböck
Let Third-Country Nationals Become Citizens of their Host Member State and the European Union, by Eva Ersbøll
A Dysfunctional Eurozenship? The Question of Free Movement, by Jules Lepoutre
On the Risk of Trying to Kill “Seven at a Blow”, by Jean-Thomas Arrighi
Eurozenship: Always a Bridesmaid?, Jelena Džankić
More Suffocating Bonds?! Conceptual and Legal Flaws of the Unnecessary Proposal, by Dimitry Kochenov
EU Citizenship as an Autonomous Status of Constituent Power, by Oliver Garner
Member State and EU Citizenships Should be Strengthened Rather than Disentangled, by Willem Maas
A Citizenship Maze: How to Cure a Chronic Disease?, by Liav Orgad
Rejoinder
EU Citizenship Enigma Variations, Mushrooming Historical Time and Emancipation, by Dora Kostakopoulou