Citizenship, alienage and the modern constitutional state : a gendered history / Helen Irving.
2016
K3230.W6 I78 2016 (Map It)
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Author
Title
Citizenship, alienage and the modern constitutional state : a gendered history / Helen Irving.
Published
Cambridge, United Kingdom : Cambridge University Press, 2016.
Copyright
©2016
Call Number
K3230.W6 I78 2016
ISBN
9781107065109 hardback
1107065100 hardback
1107065100 hardback
Description
xiv, 289 pages ; 24 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)919483347
Summary
"To have a nationality is a human right. But between the nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries, virtually every country in the world adopted laws that stripped citizenship from women who married foreign men. Despite the resulting hardships and even statelessness experienced by married women, it took until 1957 for the international community to condemn the practice, with the adoption of the United Nations Convention on the Nationality of Married Women. Citizenship, Alienage, and the Modern Constitutional State tells the important yet neglected story of marital denaturalization from a comparative perspective. Examining denaturalization laws and their impact on women around the world, with a focus on Australia, Britain, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand and the United States, it advances a concept of citizenship as profoundly personal and existential. In doing so, it sheds light on both a specific chapter of legal history and the theory of citizenship in general"-- Provided by publisher.
"There was a time, not so long ago, when marriage turned women into aliens in their own country. For the simple act of marrying a foreign man their citizenship was stripped from them. Often it was replaced with another, although sometimes with none at all. This history is little known, and the laws that performed its strange alchemy are even less understood. The story's end lies in the United Nations Convention on the Nationality of Married Women. The Convention, adopted in 1957 and entered into force in 1958, is, undeniably, one of the lesser known of the international rights-bearing treaties, overshadowed by the mighty UN Conventions that were ratified in the following decades, giving expression to the rights of disadvantaged groups and peoples, including women. Yet, in its day, the 1957 Convention was a great milestone in the protection of rights. It addressed a century-old (or older) practice that had caused hardship in the lives of countless individuals and at the heart of which lay what we recognize today as a profound denial of rights"-- Provided by publisher.
"There was a time, not so long ago, when marriage turned women into aliens in their own country. For the simple act of marrying a foreign man their citizenship was stripped from them. Often it was replaced with another, although sometimes with none at all. This history is little known, and the laws that performed its strange alchemy are even less understood. The story's end lies in the United Nations Convention on the Nationality of Married Women. The Convention, adopted in 1957 and entered into force in 1958, is, undeniably, one of the lesser known of the international rights-bearing treaties, overshadowed by the mighty UN Conventions that were ratified in the following decades, giving expression to the rights of disadvantaged groups and peoples, including women. Yet, in its day, the 1957 Convention was a great milestone in the protection of rights. It addressed a century-old (or older) practice that had caused hardship in the lives of countless individuals and at the heart of which lay what we recognize today as a profound denial of rights"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 275-281) and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
vi
Preface
vii
Introduction
1
1.
emergence of modern citizenship
30
2.
Naturalisation
48
3.
impact of marital denaturalisation
73
4.
Marital citizenship and war
115
5.
Marital denaturalisation begins to unravel
150
6.
international response
193
7.
What is a citizen?
237
Bibliography
275
Index
282