Ius Doni in International Law and EU Law
In: Theory and Practice of Public International Law Ser.
Intro -- Ius Doni in International Law and EU Law -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of Abbreviations -- List of Tables -- Table of Cases -- Introduction -- 1 Key Questions -- 2 Structure of the Monograph -- 1 Key Contours of Citizenship and Ius Doni -- 1.1 Citizenship Framework and Development -- 1.1.1 Citizenship and State Sovereignty -- 1.1.2 Citizenship in Ancient Greece and Rome -- 1.1.3 Citizenship from the Middle Ages to Modern History -- 1.1.4 Citizenship in the XXth and XXIst Centuries -- 1.2 Ius Doni and Citizenship Realities -- 1.2.1 Citizenship Requirements -- 1.2.2 Facilitated Naturalisation -- 1.2.3 Ius Doni and Other Forms of Naturalisation -- 1.2.4 Ius Doni and Inequalities -- 1.3 Conclusions to Chapter 1 -- 2 Ius Doni in International Law -- 2.1 Rules and Limitations of International law -- 2.1.1 Citizenship and Non-discrimination -- 2.1.2 Right to Citizenship -- 2.1.3 Statelessness in Practice -- 2.1.4 Mass Conferral of Citizenship -- 2.2 Dual Nationality and Residence -- 2.2.1 Dual Citizenship: from Resistance to Acceptance -- 2.2.2 Diplomatic and Consular Protection -- 2.2.3 Genuine Link and Acquisition of Citizenship -- 2.2.4 Residence and Ius Doni -- 2.3 Conclusions to Chapter 2 -- 3 Ius Doni in EU Law -- 3.1 Supranational Cooperation and Citizenship beyond the Nation-State -- 3.1.1 The New Legal Order -- 3.1.2 EU Citizenship -- 3.1.3 Discretion of Member States in Citizenship Matters -- 3.1.4 Rights of EU Citizens -- 3.2 Solidarity and Loyal Cooperation -- 3.2.1 Article 4(3) TEU -- 3.2.2 The Maltese Matter: Article 4(3) in Practice? -- 3.2.3 Genuine Link and Sincere Cooperation -- 3.2.4 Ius Doni and Mass Conferral of Citizenship -- 3.3 Conclusions to Chapter 3 -- 4 Ius Doni: Procedures and Practices -- 4.1 Justification and Procedures -- 4.1.1 The Economic Imperative -- 4.1.2 Requirements of Citizenship and Residence Programs.