mercoledì 28 agosto 2013

European Union Citizenship Rights and Duties: Civil, Political and Social


Theodora Kostakopoulou 


University of Warwick - School of Law

August 27, 2013

Forthcoming in E. Isin and P. Neyers (eds.), Global Handbook of Citizenship Studies (London: Routledge, 2014)
Warwick School of Law Research Paper No. 2013-25 

Abstract:      
The ‘market bias’ underpinning discussions about EU citizenship is quite puzzling. It may be difficult to find another category of persons, apart from EU citizens, for whom the personal and the professional do not overlap, since both constitute dimensions of the same life. Such economic determinism implies that: i) certain aspects of the self can have a separate existence thereby suggesting, and defending, a fragmentary self; and ii) freedom of movement can be separated from the sociality that accompanies one’s pre-border crossing status and his/her settlement in another Member State. In other words, it is not only a naïve economism that underpins the notion of ‘market citizenship', but also a methodological individualism since the term ‘market citizens’ necessarily centers our mind to ‘asocial citizens’ and ‘floaters’, that is, individuals willing to cross borders in order to maximize their economic self-interest. In what follows, I argue that these conceptions are misleading and misplaced for a number of reasons and that free movement of persons in the European Union cannot be thought of separately from its social, political and normative dimensions. If we are to understand what being an EU citizen means, we need to see individuals ‘in their fullness’ and not to focus on one aspect of their lives, namely, the economic one, prioritize this and then infer the rest. In addition, we must get a number of foci of inquiry into balance and to integrate the civil, political and social dimensions of EU citizenship, on the one hand, and rights and (future) duties, on the other. In this way, European Union citizenship emerges as an evolving whole of mutually interacting and interconnected parts and generative of new political realities and enriching associational bonds.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 21
Keywords: European Union citizenship, free movement, rights, Court of Justice of the European Union, sociality, equal treatment, citizenship rights, duties of EU citizenship

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