Abstract

AbstractEU institutions have argued on several occasions that national and EU citizenship should not be awarded without any genuine link with the Member State concerned. Some scholars have adopted the same position, justifying their position referring to the genuine link requirement established by the International Court of Justice in Nottebohm. This has prompted criticism from legal scholars, who point out that Nottebohm was wrong as a matter of international law and moral principle. This paper shows that supporters and critics have failed to recognise that they have been talking with different conceptions of the genuine link requirement in mind. The question of whether to apply a genuine link requirement for the recognition of nationality is altogether different from the question of whether to apply a genuine link requirement for the acquisition of nationality. Nottebohm concerns the first; the arguments of EU institutions the second. The argument of EU institutions cannot therefore be dismissed by dismissing Nottebohm. I subsequently explore the normative arguments for predicating the boundaries of national membership on a genuine link requirement. There are weighty moral reasons for member states to condition the acquisition of national and EU citizenship on the presence of a genuine link. Finally, moving from the normative to the practical, I argue that such a requirement would have far-reaching consequences (targeting not just investor citizenship schemes) and cannot be enforced as a requirement under EU law.

Highlights

  • EU institutions have argued on several occasions that national and EU citizenship should not be awarded without any genuine link with the Member State concerned

  • This paper shows that supporters and critics have often failed to recognise that they have been talking with different conceptions of the genuine link requirement in mind

  • The main reason that EU institutions have criticised these practices relates to the fact that the EU has its own citizenship that is derived from the nationalities of the member states

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Summary

Introduction

Two opposing trends have been identified regarding the evolution of rules on the acquisition of citizenship. On this basis, they contest the legal proceedings brought by the EU against national investor citizenship schemes. Moving from the theoretical to the practical, I shall argue that it may be desirable for member states to condition the acquisition of national and EU citizenship on the presence of a genuine link, it appears difficult for the EU to enforce such a requirement (section D)

Genuine links: recognising and allocating nationality
Genuine links as a condition for the acquisition of citizenship?
Genuine links: proxies and practice
Should genuine links matter for the acquisition of citizenship?
Genuine links in EU law
Genuine links and the recognition and allocation of EU citizenship
The consequences of a genuine link requirement
Genuine links and EU law
Conclusion
Should the principle of genuine links determine the allocation of nationality?

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