Abstract

With the Treaty of Amsterdam, the future of European Union citizenship is directly linked to developments in European refugee and asylum policy. The Treaty on European Union granted European Union citizenship to all citizens of the member states, while one of the chief aims of the Treaty of Amsterdam’s Area of Freedom, Security and Justice is to regularize the position of third-country nationals within the European Union and the Single European Market. Refugees and asylum seekers will be directly affected by the harmonization of migration policies and by the future evolution of the still underdeveloped concept of citizenship of the European Union.

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