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Oxford University Press, USA

EU Citizenship Law

EU Citizenship Law

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European Union citizenship is a novel and complex legal status. Since its formal conception in the Maastricht Treaty, EU citizenship has catalysed an extraordinary, and ongoing, legal experiment, the development and implications of which are traced comprehensively throughout this book. EU Citizenship Law articulates, explains, and analyses the legal framework and legal developments that have shaped the status of EU citizenship and the rights that it confers on Member State nationals. By examining how the rights and responsibilities produced by EU citizenship relate to other rights conferred by EU law, the distinctive meaning and scope - the added legal value - of EU citizenship is uncovered. But the legal story examined here sits in deeper and wider economic, political, social, and emotional contexts because EU citizenship is also an idea: a vector of European integration, collective personhood, and multi-layered identities that reflects the paradoxically inclusive and exclusive qualities of citizenship more generally. EU citizenship challenges us to consider the worth and deepen the protection of the person, and to shape a European Union where principles and values really matter. Thorough yet accessible, this work provides a comprehensive legal reference point for the progression of debates about what EU citizenship law actually 'is, ' and for the continuing study and practice of EU citizenship law

Author: Niamh Nic Shuibhne
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 01/26/2024
Pages: 640
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 2.80lbs
Size: 9.50h x 7.20w x 2.40d
ISBN: 9780198795315

About the Author
Niamh Nic Shuibhne, Professor of European Union Law, University of Edinburgh

Niamh Nic Shuibhne is Professor of EU Law at the University of Edinburgh. Her research examines substantive EU law from a constitutional perspective, with particular focus on principle-based analysis of free movement and Union citizenship. She was awarded a Leverhulme Trust Major Research Fellowship (2016-2019) to examine how protection of the commitment to equal treatment in EU law came to represent an ideological challenge for the Union: how it became a 'confounding' rather than founding EU value. Niamh is a Joint Editor of the Common Market Law Review. Her current research explores the integrity of the EU legal order as well as the concepts and principles that both constitute and distinguish it.

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