Product details
- Categories: Citizenship, Citizenship
- Publisher: HART PUBLISHING
- Collection: Modern Studies in European Law
- ISBN: 9781509917938
- Publication Date: 21/03/2019
- Binding: Paperback
- Number of pages: 248
Summary
This book argues that there is an inherent relationship between EU
fundamental rights and EU citizenship: they both have the same objective
of guaranteeing protection for the individual. This is underpinned by
the development of case law in the field by the Court of Justice of the
EU (CJEU). Here, however, the author proposes that that relationship has
weakened in recent years as the CJEU has entered increasingly sensitive
territory in regard to the protection of citizenship rights and
fundamental rights.
Writing in the post UK–EU referendum
environment, the author argues that this decline is attributable to
increasing Euroscepticism, which has worsened since the Eurozone crisis
and even more so in light of Brexit, and arguments made that leaving the
EU would reduce immigration. This argument is particularly important to
note given the rising fears of immigration that underlie much of the
dissatisfaction with the EU project: a feeling prevalent not only in the
UK. The chapters look at the rights of migrant EU citizens in Member
States other than their own, and the guarantees that exist as a matter
of protecting their fundamental human rights, which are present
alongside rights enjoyed as part of being an EU citizen.