Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-nr4z6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-23T10:45:16.124Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 November 2020

Moritz Jesse
Affiliation:
Universiteit Leiden
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
European Societies, Migration, and the Law
The ‘Others' amongst ‘Us'
, pp. 374 - 426
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Primary Sources

Aas, K. F., ‘The Ordered and the Bordered Society: Migration Control, Citizenship and the Northern Penal State’, in Aas, K. F. and Bosworth, M. (eds.), The Borders of Punishment: Migration, Citizenship and Social Exclusion (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), pp. 2139.Google Scholar
Abraham, D., ‘Doing Justice on Two Fronts. The Liberal Dilemma in Immigration’ (2010) 33(6) Ethnic and Racial Studies, 968985.Google Scholar
Abraham, D., ‘Immigrant Integration and Social Solidarity in a Time of Crisis’ (2014) 1(2) Critical Historical Studies, 215253.Google Scholar
Ackerman, D., We, the People. Vol. 2 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Acosta Arcarazo, D., The Long-Term Residence Status as a Subsidiary Form of EU Citizenship: An Analysis of Directive 2003/109 (Leiden: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2011).Google Scholar
Acosta Arcarazo, D., The National versus the Foreigner in South America – 200 Years of Migration and Citizenship Law (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018).Google Scholar
Acosta Arcarazo, D. and Geddes, A., ‘The Development, Application and Implications of an EU Rule of Law in the Area of Migration Policy’ (2013) 51(2) Journal of Common Market Studies, 179193.Google Scholar
Acosta Arcarazo, D. and Martire, J., ‘Trapped in the Lobby: Europe’s Revolving Doors and the Other as Xenos’ (2014) 39(3) European Law Review, 362379Google Scholar
Addison, P., The Road to 1945: British Politics and the Second World War (London: Random House, 1994).Google Scholar
Ager, A. and Strang, A., ‘Understanding Integration: A Conceptual Framework’ (2008) 21(2) Journal of Refugee Studies, 166191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Agnew, J., ‘Borders on the Mind: Re-framing Border Thinking’ (2008) (1)4 Ethics & Global Politics, 175191.Google Scholar
Ajzenstadt, M. and Shapira, A., ‘The Socio-Legal Construction of Otherness under a Neo-Liberal Regime – The Case of Foreign Workers in the Israeli Criminal Courts’ (2012) 52(4) British Journal of Criminology, 685704.Google Scholar
Ammaturo, F., ‘Europe and Whiteness: Challenges to European Identity and European Citizenship in the Light of Brexit and the “Refugees/Migrants Crisis”’ (2019) 22(4) European Journal of Social Theory, 548566.Google Scholar
Anagnostaras, G., ‘Enhanced Protection of EU Nationals against Expulsion and the Concept of Internal Public Security: Comment on the PI Case’ (2012) 37(4) European Law Review, 627639.Google Scholar
Anderson, B., Us & Them – The Dangerous Politics of Immigration Control (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Anderson, B., Gibney, M., and Paoletti, E., ‘Citizenship, Deportation and the Boundaries of Belonging’ (2011) 15(5) Citizenship Studies, 547563.Google Scholar
Andersson, R., ‘Hardwiring the Frontier? The Politics of Security Technology in Europe’s “Fight against Illegal Migration”’ (2016) 47(1) Security Dialogue, 2239.Google Scholar
Andriessen, I. and Dagevos, J., ‘Tegenpolen. Hoe de bevolking denkt over migranten uit Midden- en Oost-Europa en hoe migranten uit Midden- en Oost-Europa denken over (de kansen in) Nederland’, in Bonjour, S., Coello-Eertink, L., Dagevos, J., Huinder, C., Odé, A., and de Vries, K. (eds.), Open grenzen, nieuwe uitdagingen. Arbeidsmigratie uit Midden- en Oost-Europa (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2015), pp. 5578.Google Scholar
Anthias, F., ‘Beyond Integration: Intersectional Issues of Social Solidarity and Social Hierachy’, in Anthias, F. and Pajnik, M. (eds.), Contesting Integration, Engendering Migration – Theory and Practice (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2014), pp. 1336.Google Scholar
Anzaldúa, G. E., Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza (San Francisco: Aunt Lute Books, 1999).Google Scholar
Arato, A., Post Sovereign Constitution Making, Learning and Legitimacy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arendt, H., Men in Dark Times (London: Jonathan Cape, 1968).Google Scholar
Arendt, H., Origins of Totalitarianism (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1973).Google Scholar
Armenta, A., Protect, Serve, and Deport: The Rise of Policing as Immigration Enforcement (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2017).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arnardóttir, A. M., ‘The Differences that Make a Difference: Recent Developments in the Discrimination Grounds and the Margin of Appreciation under Article 14 of the European Convention on Human Rights’ (2014) 14(4) Human Rights Law Review, 647670.Google Scholar
Arnold, S. and Quinn, E., Resettlement of Refugees and Private Sponsorship in Ireland (Dublin: ESRI Research Series, 2016).Google Scholar
Ashiagbor, D., ‘Unravelling the Embedded Liberal Bargain: Labour and Social Welfare Law in the Context of EU Market Integration’ (2013) 19(3) European Law Journal, 303324.Google Scholar
Atger, A., The Abolition of Internal Border Checks in an Enlarged Schengen Area: Freedom of Movement or a Scattered Web of Security Checks? (CEPS Challenge Paper No. 8, 20 March 2008).Google Scholar
Atrey, S., ‘Race Discrimination in EU Law after Jyske Finans’ (2018) 55(2) Common Market Law Review, 625641.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Azoulai, L., ‘“Integration through Law” and Us’ (2016) 14(2) International Journal of Constitutional Law, 449463.Google Scholar
Azoulai, L., ‘Solitude, désoeuvrement et conscience critique. Les ressorts d’une recomposition des études juridiques européennes’ (2015) 15(1) Politiques Européennes, 8286.Google Scholar
Azoulai, L., ‘Transfiguring European Citizenship: From Member State Territory to Union Territory’, in Kochenov, D. (ed.), EU Citizenship and Federalism: The Role of Rights (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), pp. 178203.Google Scholar
Baer, S., ‘A Closer Look at Law: Human Rights as Multi-Level Sites of Struggles over Multi-Dimensional Equality’ (2010) 6(2) Utrecht Law Journal, 5676.Google Scholar
Bakker, L., Cheung, S. Y., and Phillimore, J., ‘The Asylum Integration Paradox: Comparing Asylum Support Systems and Refugee Integration in the Netherlands and the UK’ (2016) 54(4) International Migration, 118132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Balch, A. and Balabanova, E., ‘Ethics, Politics and Migration: Public Debates on the Free Movement of Romanians and Bulgarians in the UK, 2006–2013’ (2016) 36(1) Politics, 1935.Google Scholar
Balibar, E., ‘Es gibt keinen Staat in Europa. Racism and Politics in Europe Today’ (1991) 186(1) New Left Review, 519.Google Scholar
Bamberg, K., The EU Resettlement Framework: From a Humanitarian Pathway to a Migration Management Tool? (Brussels: EPC Discussion Paper, 26 June 2018).Google Scholar
Barker, V., ‘On Bauman’s Moral Duty: Population Reigstries, REVA and Eviction from the Nordic Realm’, in Eriksson, A. (ed.), Punishing the Other. The Social Production of Immorality Revised (London: Routledge, 2016), pp. 184207.Google Scholar
Barker, V., ‘Nordic Vagabonds: The Roma and the Logic of Benevolent Violence in the Swedish Welfare State’ (2017) 14(1) European Journal of Criminology, 120139.Google Scholar
Barnard, C., The Substantive Law of the EU, The Four Freedoms, 2nd ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Barrosso, L. R., ‘Here, There, and Everywhere: Human Dignity in Contemporary Law and in the Transnational Discourse’ (2012) 35(2) Boston College International and Comparative Law Review, 331393.Google Scholar
Bauböck, R., ‘Expansive Citizenship – Voting beyond Territory and Membership’ (2005) 38(4) PS: Political Science and Politics, 683687.Google Scholar
Bauböck, R., ‘Why European Citizenship? Normative Approaches to Supranational Union’ (2007) 8(2) Theoretical Inquiries in Law, 453488.Google Scholar
Bauböck, R., Citizenship Policies in the New Europe (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Bauböck, R., ‘Preface’, in Baubock, R., Perching, B., and Wiebke, S. (eds.), Citizenship Policies in the New Europe (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2009), pp. 1520.Google Scholar
Bauman, Z., Modernity and the Holocaust (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1989).Google Scholar
Bauman, Z., Life in Fragments. Essays in Postmodern Morality (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1995).Google Scholar
Bauman, Z., Liquid Modernity (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2000).Google Scholar
Bauman, Z., Wasted Lives (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2004).Google Scholar
Bauman, Z., Strangers at Our Door (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Baur, G., Rydelski, M. S., and Zatschler, C., European Free Trade Association (EFTA) and the European Economic Area (EEA), 2nd ed. (Alphen aan den Rijn: Wolters Kluwer, 2018).Google Scholar
Beauvoir, S. de, The Second Sex, 1949, translated version, Parshley, H. M. (New York: Vintage Books, 1974).Google Scholar
Beck, G., The Legal Reasoning of the Court of Justice of the EU (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2013).Google Scholar
Beck, U., Cosmopolitan Vision (Cambridge: Polity, 2006).Google Scholar
Beck, U., Risk Society. Towards a New Modernity (London: Sage Publications Ltd, 1992).Google Scholar
Becker, H., Outsiders. Studies in the Sociology of Deviance (New York: The Free Press, 1963).Google Scholar
Bednarowicz, B., ‘Workers’ Rights in the Gig Economy: Is the New EU Directive on Transparent and Predictable Working Conditions in the EU Really a Boost?’, EU Law Analysis, 24 April 2019.Google Scholar
Behling, F. and Harvey, M., ‘The Evolution of False Self-employment in the British Construction Industry: A Neo-Polanyian Account of Labour Market Formation’ (2015) 29(6) Work, Employment and Society, 969988.Google Scholar
Beirens, H. and Fratzke, S., Taking Stock of Refugee Resettlement. Policy Objectives, Practical Tradeoffs, and the Evidence Base (Brussels: Migration Policy Institute, 2017).Google Scholar
Belavusau, U. and Kochenov, D., ‘Kirchberg Dispensing the Punishment: Inflicting “Civil Death” on Prisoners in Onuekwere (C-378/12) and MG (C-400/12)’ (2016) 41(4) European Law Review, 557577.Google Scholar
Benhabib, S., The Rights of Others: Aliens, Residents and Citizens (Cambridge: Cambridge Univeristy Press, 2004).Google Scholar
Benhabib, S., ‘Democratic Iterations’, in Post, R. (ed.), Another Cosmopolitanism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006), pp. 4581.Google Scholar
Benhabib, S., ‘Claiming Rights across Borders. International Human Rights and Democratic Sovereignty’ (2009) 103(4) American Political Science Review, 691704.Google Scholar
Berger, P. L. and Luckmann, T., The Social Construction of Reality. A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge (New York: Anchor Books, 1966).Google Scholar
Besters, M. and Diepenhorst, D., Hervestiging en Humanitaire Toelating in Nederland: Beleid en praktijk (The Hague: EMN Nederland, 2016).Google Scholar
Bigo, D., ‘Europe passoire, Europe fortresse. La sécurisation et humanitarisation de l’immigration’, in Rea, A. (ed.), Immigration et racisme en Europe (Brussels: Complexe, 1998), pp. 203241.Google Scholar
Bigo, D., ‘Criminalisation of “Migrants”. The Side Effect of the Will to Control the Frontiers and the Sovereign Illusion’, in Bogusz, B., Cholewinski, R., Cygan, A., and Szyszczak, E. (eds.), Irregular Migration and Human Rights (Leiden: Martinus Nijhoff, 2004), pp. 6191.Google Scholar
Binchy, W., ‘The Implications of the Referendum for Constitutional Protection and Human Rights – Part I’ (2004) 22 Irish Law Times, 154.Google Scholar
Bloch, A., ‘Refugees in the UK Labour Market: The Conflict between Economic Integration and Policy-led Labour Market Restriction’ (2007) 37(1) Journal of Social Policy, 2136.Google Scholar
Bloch, A., ‘The Labour Market Experiences and Strategies of Young Undocumented Migrants’ (2013) 27(2) Work, Employment and Society, 272287.Google Scholar
Block, L., ‘Regulating Membership: Explaining Restriction and Stratification of Family Migration in Europe’ (2015) 36(11) Journal of Family Issues, 14331452.Google Scholar
Bloemraad, I., ‘Theorising the Power of Citizenship as Claims-Making’ (2018) 44(1) Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 426.Google Scholar
Blomely, N., ‘Making Space for Law’, in Cox, K. R., Low, M., and Robinson, J. (eds.), The SAGE Handbook of Political Geography (New York: SAGE Publications, 2008), p. 155.Google Scholar
Bloul, R., ‘Anti-discrimination Laws, Islamophobia, and Ethnicization of Muslim Identities in Europe and Australia’ (2008) 28(1) Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, 725.Google Scholar
Blyth, M., Great Transformations: Economic Ideas and Institutional Change in the Twentieth Century (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002).Google Scholar
Böckenförde, E.-W., ‘Die Entstehung des Staates als Vorgang der Säkularisation’ (1967), in Böckenförde, E.-W. (ed.), Staat, Gesellschaft, Freiheit. Studien zur Staatstheorie und zum Verfassungsrecht (Berlin: Suhrkamp, 1976), pp. 92114.Google Scholar
Boeles, P., den Heijer, M., Lodder, G., and Wouters, K., European Migration Law (Antwerp: Intersentia, 2009).Google Scholar
Boerger, A. and Rasmussen, M., ‘Transforming European Law. The Establishment of the Constitutional Discourse from 1950 to 1993’ (2014) 10(2) European Constitutional Law Review, 199225.Google Scholar
Bommes, M., ‘Die Planung der Migration’ (2009) 38(11) Zeitschrift für Ausländerrecht und Ausländerpolitik, 376381.Google Scholar
Bonnett, A. and Nayak, A., ‘Cultural Geographies of Racialisation: The Territory of Race’, in Anderson, K., Domosh, M., Pile, S., and Thrift, N. (eds.), Handbook of Cultural Geography (London: Sage, 2003), pp. 300312.Google Scholar
Bonjour, S., ‘Between Integration Provision and Selection Mechanism. Party Politics, Judicial Constraints, and the Making of French and Dutch Policies of Civic Integration Abroad’ (2010) 12(3) European Journal of Migration and Law, 299318.Google Scholar
Bonjour, S., ‘Speaking of Rights. The Influence of Law and Courts on the Making of Family Migration Policies in Germany’ (2016) 38(4) Law & Policy, 328348.Google Scholar
Bonjour, S. and Block, L., ‘Ethnicizing Citizenship, Questioning Membership. Explaining the Decreasing Family Migration Rights of Citizens in Europe’ (2016) 20(6–7) Citizenship Studies, 779794.Google Scholar
Bonjour, S. and de Hart, B., ‘A Proper Wife, a Proper Marriage. Constructions of ‘Us’ and ‘Them’ in Dutch Family Migration Policy’ (2013) 20(1) European Journal of Women’s Studies, 6176.Google Scholar
Bonjour, S. and Duyvendak, J. W., ‘The “Migrant with Poor Prospects”: Racialized Intersections of Class and Culture in Dutch Civic Integration Debates’ (2018) 41(5) Ethnic and Racial Studies, 882900.Google Scholar
Bonjour, S. and Vink, M., ‘When Europeanization Backfires: The Normalization of European Migration Politics’ (2013) 48(4) Acta Politica, 389407.Google Scholar
Bonjour, S., Ripoll Servent, A., and Thielemann, E., ‘Beyond Venue Shopping and Liberal Constraint. A New Research Agenda for EU Migration Policies and Politics’ (2017) 25(3) Journal of European Public Policy, 409421.Google Scholar
Borg, S. and Diez, T., ‘Postmodern EU? Integration between Alternative Horizons and Territorial Angst’ (2016) 54(1) Journal of Common Market Studies, 136151.Google Scholar
Bosniak, L., The Citizen and the Alien: Dilemmas of Contemporary Membership (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Bosworth, M., Franko, K., and Pickering, S., ‘Punishment, Globalization and Migration Control: “Get Them the Hell Out of Here”’ (2018) 20(1) Punishment & Society, 3453.Google Scholar
Bowen, J. B., Can Islam be French? Pluralism and Pragmatism in a Secularist State (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Bowling, B. and Westenra, S., ‘Racism, Immigration and Policing’, in Bosworth, M., Parmar, A., and Vazquez, Y. (eds.), Race, Criminal Justice and Migration Control: Enforcing the Boundaries of Belonging (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017), pp. 6177.Google Scholar
Brambilla, C., ‘Exploring the Critical Potential of the Borderscapes Concept’ (2015) 20(1) Geopolitics, 1434.Google Scholar
Bribosia, E., ‘Les politiques d’intégration de l’Union européenne et des États Membres à l’épreuve du principe de non-discrimination’, in Pascouau, I. and Strik, T. (eds.), Which Integration Policies for Migrants? (Nijmegen: Wolf, 2012), pp. 5181.Google Scholar
Brink, M. van den, ‘The Court and the Legislators: Who Should Define the Scope of Free Movement in the EU?’, in Bauböck, R. (eds.), Debating European Citizenship (Cham: Springer IMISCOE Research Series, 2019), pp. 133138.Google Scholar
Broughton, A., Biletta, I., and Kullander, M., Flexible Forms of Work: Very Atypical Contractual Arrangements (Dublin: EurWORK, 2010).Google Scholar
Broughton, A., Green, M., Rickard, C., Swift, S., Eichhorst, W., Tobsch, V., Magda, I., Lewandowski, P., Keister, R., Jonaviciene, D., Ramos Martín, N. E., Valsamis, D., and Tros, F., Precarious Employment in Europe, IP/A/EMPL/2014-14 PE 587.285 (DG Internal Policies, European Parliament, 2016).Google Scholar
Brouwer, J., Woude, M. van der, and Leun, J. van der, ‘(Cr)immigrant Framing in Border Areas: Decision-Making Processes of Dutch Border Police Officers’ (2018) 28(4) Policing and Society, 448463.Google Scholar
Brubaker, R., ‘Membership without Citizenship’, in Brubaker, R. (ed.), Immigration and the Politics of Citizenship in Europe and North America (Lanham: University Press of America, 1989), pp. 145160.Google Scholar
Brubaker, R., Citizenship and Nationhood in France and Germany (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1998).Google Scholar
Brubaker, R., ‘The Manichean Myth: Rethinking the Distinction between “Civic” and “Ethnic” Nationalism’, in Kriesi, H., Armingeon, K., Slegrist, H., and Wimmer, A. (eds.), Nation and National Identity: The European Experience Perspective (Zürich: Verlag Rüegger, 1999), pp. 5572.Google Scholar
Campion, E. D., ‘The Career Adaptive Refugee: Exploring the Structural and Personal Barriers to Refugee Resettlement’ (2018) 105(1) Journal of Vocational Behaviour, 616.Google Scholar
Campomori, F. and Caponio, T., ‘Immigrant Integration Policymaking in Italy: Regional Policies in a Multi-level Governance Perspective’ (2017) 83(2) International Review of Administrative Sciences, 303321.Google Scholar
Canaris, C.-W. and Larenz, M., Methodenlehre der Rechtswissenschaft, 3rd ed. (Heidelberg: Springer, 1995).Google Scholar
Canetti, E., The Numbered: A Play (London: Marion Boyars Publishers Ltd, 1984).Google Scholar
Caporaso, J. and Tarrow, S., ‘Polanyi in Brussels: Supranational Institutions and the Transnational Embedding of Markets’ (2009) 63(4) International Organisation, 593620.Google Scholar
Cardoso, P. M., Erdinc, I., Horemans, J., and Lavery, S., Precarious Employment in Europe (Vienna: Renner Institute, 2014).Google Scholar
Carens, J., The Ethics of Immigration (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Carens, J., ‘An Overview of the Ethics of Immigration’ (2014) 17(5) Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, 538559.Google Scholar
Carter, D. and Jesse, M., ‘The “Dano Evolution”: Assessing Legal Integration and Access to Social Benefits for EU Citizens’ (2018) 3(3) European Papers, 11791208.Google Scholar
Caruso, D. and Nicola, F., ‘Legal Scholarship and External Critique in EU Law’, in Rodin, S., and Perišin, T. (eds.), The Transformation or Reconstitution of Europe (Oxford: Bloomsbury Hart Publishing, 2018), pp. 221240.Google Scholar
Casella Colombeau, S., ‘Policing the internal Schengen Borders – Managing the Double Bind between Free Movement and Migration Control’ (2017) 27(5) Policing and Society, 480493.Google Scholar
Castelli Gattinara, P., ‘The “Refugee Crisis” in Italy As a Crisis of Legitimacy’ (2017) 9(3) Contemporary Italian Politics, 318331.Google Scholar
Castles, S., ‘The Factors that Make and Unmake Migration Policies’ (2004) 38(3) International Migration Review, 852884.Google Scholar
Castles, S., ‘Understanding Global Migration. A Social Transformation Perspective’ (2010) 36(10) Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 15651586.Google Scholar
Chatty, D., ‘Anthropology and Forced Migration’, in Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, E., Loescher, G., Long, K., and Sigona, N. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Refugee & Forced Migration Studies (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014), pp. 7485.Google Scholar
Cheung, S. Y. and Phillimore, J., ‘Refugees, Social Capital, and Labour Market Integration in the UK’ (2014) 48(3) Sociology, 518536.Google Scholar
Chlebny, J., ‘Public Order, National Security and the Rights of Third-Country Nationals in Immigration Cases’ (2018) 20(2) European Journal of Migration and Law, 115134.Google Scholar
Christie, N., ‘Suitable Enemy’, in Bianchi, H. and van Swaaningen, R. (eds.), Abolitionism: Toward a Non-Repressive Approach to Crime (Amsterdam: Free University Press, 1986), pp. 4254.Google Scholar
Clark, J. W., Race, Violent Crime, and American Culture (London: Transaction Publishers, 1998).Google Scholar
Clarke, D., ‘Constitutional Bootstrapping: The Irish Nation’ (2000) 18 Irish Law Times, 7477.Google Scholar
Cohen, J., ‘Changing Paradigms of Citizenship and the Exclusiveness of the Demos’ (1999) 14(3) Internationals Sociology, 245268.Google Scholar
Collier, D. and Levitsky, S., ‘Democracy with Adjectives: Conceptual Innovation in Comparative Research’ (1997) 49(3) World Politics, 430451.Google Scholar
Colliot-Thélène, C., ‘What Europe Does to Citizenship’, in Chalmers, D., Jachtenfuchs, M., and Joerges, C. (eds.), The End of the Eurocrats’ Dream: Adjusting to European Diversity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016), pp. 127146.Google Scholar
Côté-Boucher, K., ‘The Paradox of Discretion: Customs and the Changing Occupational Identity of Canadian Border Officers’ (2016) 56(1) British Journal of Criminology, 4967.Google Scholar
Cousins, M., ‘The Baseless Fabric of this Vision: EU Citizenship, the Right to Reside and EU Law’ (2016) 23(2) Journal of Social Security Law, 89105.Google Scholar
Cover, R. R., ‘Foreword: Nomos and Narrative’ (1983) 97(4) Harvard Law Review, 446.Google Scholar
Cox, N., Behind the Veil (Cheltenham: Elgar, 2019).Google Scholar
Cremers, J., Non-standard Employment Relations or the Erosion of Workers’ Rights (Solidar Briefing Papers 23, 2010).Google Scholar
Croon-Gestefeld, J., Reconceptualising European Equality Law. A Comparative Institutional Analysis (Oxford: Hart, 2017).Google Scholar
Crul, M., ‘Super-Diversity vs. Assimilation: How Complex Diversity in Majority–Minority Cities Challenges the Assumptions of Assimilation’ (2016) 42(1) Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 5468.Google Scholar
Cryer, R., Hervey, T., and Sokhi-Bulley, B., Research Methodologies in EU and International Law (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2011).Google Scholar
Cunningham-Parmeter, K., ‘Alien Language: Immigration Metaphors and the Jurisprudence of Otherness’ (2011) 79(4) Fordham Law Review, 15451598.Google Scholar
Dahinden, J., ‘A Plea for the “De-migranticization” of Research on Migration and Integration’ (2016) 39(13) Ethnic and Racial Studies, 22072225.Google Scholar
Daly, E., ‘Religion as Public Good and Private Choice in Irish Constitutional Doctrine’ (2016) 56 Irish Jurist, 103122.Google Scholar
Darling, J., ‘Becoming Bare Life: Asylum, Hospitality, and the Politics of Encampment’ (2009) 27(4) Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 649665.Google Scholar
Darling, J., ‘Asylum in Austere Times: Instability, Privatization and Experimentation within the UK Asylum Dispersal System’ (2016) 29(4) Journal of Refugee Studies, 483505.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dauvergne, C., ‘Sovereignty, Migration and the Rule of Law in Global Times’ (2004) 67(4) The Modern Law Review, 588615.Google Scholar
Dauvergne, C., ‘Irregular Migration, State Sovereignty and the Rule of Law’, in Chetail, V. and Bauloz, C. (eds.), Research Handbook on International Law and Migration (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2014), pp. 7592.Google Scholar
Dauvergne, C., The New Politics of Immigration and the End of Settler Societies (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
De Bruycker, P., ‘Legislative Harmonization in European Immigration Policy’, in Cholewinski, R., Perruchoud, R., and Macdonald, E. (eds.), International Migration Law: Developing Paradigms and Key Challenges (The Hague: T.M.C. Asser Press, 2007), pp. 329348.Google Scholar
De Schutter, H. and Ypi, L., ‘Mandatory Citizenship for Immigrants’ (2015) 45(2) British Journal of Political Science, 235251.Google Scholar
De Schutter, O. Links between Migration and Discrimination. A Legal Analysis of the Situation in EU Member States (Report Prepared for the European Commission) (Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union, 2016).Google Scholar
De Vries, K. M., Integration at the Border: The Dutch Act on Integration Abroad and International Immigration Law (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2013).Google Scholar
De Vries, K. M., ‘Rewriting Abdulaziz. The ECtHR Grand Chamber’s Ruling in Biao v. Denmark’ (2016) 14(4) European Journal of Migration and Law, 467479.Google Scholar
De Witte, F., Justice in the EU: The Emergence of Transnational Solidarity (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Deen, M., Over oude wegen – Een reis door de geschiedenis van Europa (Amsterdam: Thomas Rap, 2018).Google Scholar
Dekkers, T. J. M., ‘Mobility, Control and Technology in Border Areas. Discretion and Decision-making in the Information Age’, PhD thesis, Leiden University (2019).Google Scholar
Delanty, G., ‘European Citizenship. A Critical Assessment’ (2007) 11(1) Citizenship Studies, 6372.Google Scholar
Dembour, M.-B., ‘Gaygusuz Revisited: The Limits of the European Court of Human Rights’ Equality Agenda’ (2012) 12(4) Human Rights Law Review, 689721.Google Scholar
Dembour, M.-B., When Humans Become Migrants: Study of the European Court of Human Rights with an Inter-American Counterpoint (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Dewhurst, E., ‘Exclusionary or Inclusionary Constitutional Protection: Protecting the Rights of Citizens, Non-citizens and Irregular Immigrants under Articles 40–44 of the Irish Constitution’ (2013) 49(1) Irish Jurist, 98131.Google Scholar
Diamond, L., ‘Thinking about Hybrid Regimes’ (2002) 13(2) Journal of Democracy, 2531.Google Scholar
Dobner, P., More Law, Less Democracy. The Twilight of Constitutionalism? (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Doomernik, J. and Bruquetas-Callejo, M., ‘National Immigration and Integration Policies in Europe Since 1973’, in Garcés-Mascareñas, B. and Penninx, R. (eds.), Integration Processes and Policies in Europe (Rotterdam: IMISCOE Research Series, 2016), pp. 5776.Google Scholar
Dostal, J., ‘The German Federal Election of 2017: How the Wedge Issue of Refugees and Migration Took the Shine Off Chancellor Merkel and Transformed the Party System’ (2017) 88(4) The Political Quarterly, 589602.Google Scholar
Dougan, M., ‘Expanding the Frontiers of Union Citizenship by Dismantling the Territorial Boundaries of National Welfare States?’, in Barnard, C. and Odudu, O. (eds.), The Outer Limits of European Union Law (London: Hart, 2009), pp. 119166.Google Scholar
Dougan, M., ‘The Bubble that Burst’, in Adams, M., Meeusen, J., Straetmans, G., and de Waele, H. (eds.), Judging Europe’s Judges (Oxford: Hart, 2013), pp. 127154.Google Scholar
Dougan, M. and Spaventa, E., ‘Wish you Weren’t Here … New Models of Social Solidarity in the European Union, in Dougan, M. and Spaventa, E. (eds.), Social Welfare and EU Law (London: Hart, 2005), pp. 181218.Google Scholar
Doyle, O., The Constitution of Ireland: A Contextual Analysis (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2018).Google Scholar
Dupré, C., ‘Human Dignity and the Withdrawal of Medical Treatment: A Missed Opportunity’ (2006) 6(3) European Human Rights Law Review, 678.Google Scholar
Durkheim, E., Division du travail social (Paris: PUF, 2007 – reprint).Google Scholar
Dworkin, R., ‘What Is Democracy’, in Tóth, G. A. (ed.), Constitution for a Disunited Nation: On Hungary’s 2011 Fundamental Law (Budapest: Central European University Press, 2012), pp. 2534.Google Scholar
Eckes, A., A Search for Solvency: Bretton Woods and the International Monetary System, 1941–1971 (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1975).Google Scholar
Editorial Comments, ‘The Critical Turn in EU Legal Studies’ (2015) 52(4) Common Market Law Review, 881888.Google Scholar
Egan, S., Thornton, L., and Walsh, J., Ireland and the European Convention on Human Rights: 60 Years and Beyond (London: Bloomsbury, 2014).Google Scholar
Eijsbouts, W. T., ‘Wir Sind Das Volk – Notes about the Notion of “The People” as Occasioned by the Lissabon Urteil’ (2010) 6(2) European Constitutional Law Review, 199222.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elias, N. and Scotson, J. L., The Established and the Outsiders (Dublin: University College Dublin Press, 1965).Google Scholar
Ellis, E., ‘Social Advantages: A New Lease of Life’ (2003) 40(3) Common Market Law Review, 639659.Google Scholar
EPSC Strategic Notes, The Future of Work: Skills and Resilience for a World of Change (Issue 13, 10 June 2016).Google Scholar
Esping-Andersen, G., The Three World of Welfare Capitalism (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1990).Google Scholar
Ette, A., ‘Europe’s Core Member States. Intended and Unintended Consequences of Strong Policy-Shaping Traditions’, in Ripoll Servent, A. and Trauner, F. (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Justice and Home Affairs Research (New York: Routledge, 2018), pp. 229239.Google Scholar
EU Fundamental Rights Agency, Handbook on European Law Relating to Asylum, Borders and Immigration (Belgium: EUFRA, 2014).Google Scholar
Farahat, A., ‘“We Want You! But …” Recruiting Migrants and Encouraging Transnational Migration through Progressive Inclusion’ (2009) 15(6) European Law Journal, 700718.Google Scholar
Fargues, É., ‘The Revival of Citizenship Deprivation in France and the UK As an Instance of Citizenship Renationalisation’ (2017) 21(8) Citizenship Studies, 984998.Google Scholar
Fassin, D., ‘The Social Construction of Otherness’, in Bonjour, S., Rea, A., and Jacobs, D. (eds.), The Others in Europe (Brussels: Editions de l’Université Bruxelles, 2011), pp. 117125.Google Scholar
Fassin, D., Humanitarian Reason: A Moral History of the Present Times (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2012).Google Scholar
Favell, A., ‘Integrating Nations: The Nation State and Research on Immigrants in Western Europe’, in Brochmann, G. (ed.), Multicultural Challenge (Comparative Social Research, Vol. 22) (Bingley: Emerald Group Publishing Limited, 2003), pp. 1342.Google Scholar
Feidenreich, D. M., Foreigners and their Food: Constructing Otherness in Jewish, Christian, and Islamic Law (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Ferrera, M., The European Union and National Welfare States, Friends, not Foes: But What Kind of Friendship? (URGE Working Paper, 4/2005).Google Scholar
Fine, S., Borders and Mobility in Turkey (Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018).Google Scholar
Fine, S. and Ypi, L. (eds.), Migration in Political Theory: The Ethics of Movement and Membership (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Flanigan, D. J., The Criminal Law of Slavery and Freedom, 1800–1868 (New York: Garland, 1987).Google Scholar
Fletcher, G., ‘Constitutional Identity’ (1992–1993) 14(2) Cardozo Law Review, 737746.Google Scholar
Foucault, M., L’Ordre du discours (Paris: Gallimard, 1971).Google Scholar
Foucault, M. and Seitter, W., Überwachen und Strafen: die Geburt des Gefängnisses, 19. Aufl ed. (Berlin: Suhrkamp, 2014).Google Scholar
Franko, K., Woude, M. A. H. van der, and Barker, V., ‘Beacons of Tolerance Dimmed? Migration, Criminalization and Hospitality in Welfare States’, in Wyller, T., Franko, K., Bendixsen, S., and Rønsdal, K. (eds.), Migrantscapes: Hospitalities and Counterspaces in a Nordic Context (Abingdon: Routledge, 2019), pp. 5575.Google Scholar
Fraser, N., ‘Reframing Justice in a Globalizing World’ (2005) 36(1) New Left Review, 6988.Google Scholar
Fredman, S., Discrimination Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Freeman, G. P. and Mirilovic, N. (eds.), Handbook on Migration and Social Policy (Cheltenham: Elgar, 2016).Google Scholar
Gallagher, M., ‘The Constitution and the Judiciary’, in Coakley, J. and Gallagher, M. (eds.), Politics in the Republic of Ireland, 4th ed. (Abingdon: Routledge, 2005), pp. 5483.Google Scholar
Gallaher, C., Dahlman, C., Gilmartin, M., Mountz, A., and Shirlow, P. (eds.), Key Concepts in Political Geography (Thousand Oaks: SAGE Publications Ltd, 2009).Google Scholar
Gallová-Kriglerová, E. and Chudžíková, A., ‘Slovak NGOs Ease Migrant Integration Locally but Need Political Support’, Social Europe, 24 October 2016.Google Scholar
Garnier, A., Jubilut, L. L., and Sandvik, K. B., ‘Introduction Refugee Resettlement as Humanitarian Governance’, in Garnier, A., Jubilut, L. L., and Sandvik, K. B. (eds.), Refugee Resettlement. Power, Politics and Humanitarian Governance (New York: Berghahn Books, 2018), pp. 227.Google Scholar
Garnier, A., Jubilut, L. L., and Sandvik, K. B., (eds.), Refugee Resettlement: Power, Politics, and Humanitarian Governance, Studies in Forced Migration. Vol. 38 (New York: Berghahn Books, 2018).Google Scholar
Gebhardt, M., ‘Die demokratische Schließung’, in Kortendiek, N. and Martinez Mateo, M. (eds.), Grenze und Demokratie. Ein Spannungsverhältnis (Frankfurt: Campus, 2017), pp. 81115.Google Scholar
Girard, R., La violence et le sacré (Paris: Grasset, 1972).Google Scholar
Giubboni, S., ‘Social Rights and Market Freedom in the European Constitution: A Re-Appraisal’ (2010) 1(2) European Labour Law Journal, 161184.Google Scholar
Giubboni, S., ‘Being a Worker in EU Law’ (2018) 9(3) European Labour Law Journal, 223235.Google Scholar
Glasman, J., ‘Seeing Like a Refugee Agency: A Short History of UNHCR Classifications in Central Africa 1961–2015’ (2017) 30(2) Journal of Refugee Studies, 337362.Google Scholar
Goebel, N., ‘Germany Must “Lead the Way” in Refugee Crisis’, Deutsche Welle, 9 September 2015.Google Scholar
Goldberg, D. T., ‘Racial Europeanisation’ (2006) 29(2) Ethnic and Racial Studies, 331364.Google Scholar
Goldmann, M., ‘The Great Recurrence: Karl Polanyi and the Crises of the European Union’ (2017) 23(3–4) European Law Journal, 272289.Google Scholar
Greer, I., ‘Welfare Reform, Precarity and the Re-commodification of Labour’ (2016) 30(1) Work, Employment and Society, 162173.Google Scholar
Grimm, D., ‘Does Europe Need a Constitution?’ (1995) 1(3) European Law Journal, 282302.Google Scholar
Groenendijk, K., ‘Long-term Immigrants and the Council of Europe’, in Guild, E. and Minderhoud, P. (eds.), Security of Residence and Expulsion (The Hague: Kluwer Law International, 2001), pp. 722.Google Scholar
Groenendijk, K., ‘Legal Concepts of Integration in EU Migration Law’ (2004) 6(2) European Journal of Migration and Law, 111126.Google Scholar
Groenendijk, K., ‘Family Reunification As a Right under Community Law’ (2006) 8(2) European Journal of Migration and Law, 215230.Google Scholar
Groenendijk, K., ‘Pre-departure Integration Strategies in the European Union: Integration or Immigration Policy?’ (2011) 13(1) European Journal of Migration and Law, 130.Google Scholar
Groenendijk, K., ‘Categorizing Human Beings in EU Migration Law’, in Bonjour, S., Rea, A., and Jacobs, D. (eds.), The Others in Europe (Brussels: Éditions de Université de Bruxelles, 2011), pp. 2136.Google Scholar
Groenendijk, K. and Strik, T., Family Reunification in Germany, Netherlands and the EU since 2000 (Nijmegen Migration Law Working Papers Series 2018/02, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen, 2018).Google Scholar
Grote, J., Bitterwolf, M., and Baraulina, T., Resettlement and Humanitarian Admission Programmes in Germany: Focus-Study by the German National Contact Point for the European Migration Network (EMN) (Nürnberg: Bundesamt für Migration und Flüchtlinge Working Paper, 2016).Google Scholar
Grove, N. J. and Zwi, A. B., ‘Our Health and Theirs: Forced Migration, Othering, and Public Health’ (2006) 62(8) Social Science & Medicine, 19311942.Google Scholar
Guia, M. J., van der Woude, M., and van der Leun, J. (eds.), Social Control and Justice: Crimmigration in the Age of Fear (The Hague: Eleven International Publishing, 2013).Google Scholar
Guild, E., ‘International Terrorism and EU Immigration, Asylum and Borders Policy: The Unexpected Victims of 11 September 2001’ (2003) 8(3) European Foreign Affairs Review, 331346.Google Scholar
Guild, E., The Legal Elements of European Identity – EU Citizenship and Migration Law (The Hague: Kluwer Law International, 2003).Google Scholar
Guild, E., ‘Cultural and Social Identity: Immigrants and the Legal Expression of National Identity’, in Guild, E. and Van Selm, J. (eds.), International Migration and Security: Opportunities and Challenges (Abingdon: Routledge, 2005), pp. 101112.Google Scholar
Guild, E. and Peers, S., ‘Out of the Ghetto? The Personal Scope of EU Law’, in Peers, S. and Rogers, N. (eds.), EU Immigration and Asylum Law: Text and Commentary (Leiden: Martinus Nijhoff, 2006), pp. 81114.Google Scholar
Guiraudon, V., ‘European Integration and Migration Policy. Vertical Policy-Making as Venue Shopping’ (2008) 38(2) Journal of Common Market Studies, 251271.Google Scholar
Gundhus, H. and Franko, K., ‘Global Policing and Mobility: Identity, Territory, Sovereignty’, in Bradford, B., Jauregui, B., and Loader, I. (eds.), The SAGE Handbook of Global Policing (London: SAGE Publications, 2016), pp. 497514.Google Scholar
Gunningham, N., ‘New Collaborative Environmental Governance: The Localization of Regulation’ (2009) 36(1) Journal of the Law and Society, 145166.Google Scholar
Gutmann, T., Recht als Kultur. Über die Grenzen des Kulturbegriffs als normatives Argument (Baden-Baden: Nomos, 2015).Google Scholar
Haag, M. F., ‘Die Letztverantwortung des Herkunftsmitgliedstaates im Unionsbürgerrecht’, in Thym, D. and Klarmann, T. (eds.), Unionsbürgerschaft und Migration im aktuellen Europarecht (Baden-Baden: Nomos, 2017), pp. 1539.Google Scholar
Habermas, J., ‘Strijd om erkenning in de democratische rechtsstaat’, in Gutmann, A. (ed.), Multiculturalisme (Amsterdam: Boom, 1995), pp. 141144.Google Scholar
Habermas, J., ‘The European Nation State: Its Achievements and its Limitations: On the Past and Future of Sovereignty and Citizenship’ (1996) 9(2) Ratio Juris, 125137.Google Scholar
Habermas, J., Die postnationale Konstellation (Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 1998).Google Scholar
Hailbronner, K., ‘Union Citizenship and Access to Social Benefits’ (2005) 42(5) Common Market Law Review, 12451267.Google Scholar
Hailbronner, K. and Thym, D., ‘Constitutional Framework and Principles for Interpretation’, in Hailbronner, K. and Thym, D. (eds.), EU Immigration and Asylum Law: A Commentary, 2nd ed. (München: C. H. Beck, 2016), pp. 10231053.Google Scholar
Hailbronner, K. and Thym, D., (eds.), EU Immigration and Asylum Law: A Commentary, 2nd ed. (München: C. H. Beck, 2016).Google Scholar
Hall, S., ‘Introduction: Who Needs “Identity”?’, in Hall, S. and du Gay, P. (eds.), Questions of Cultural Identity (London: Sage Publications, 1996), pp. 117.Google Scholar
Hamenstädt, K., ‘Unionsbürgerschaft an der Schnittstelle zwischen Integration, Solidarität, und sozialem Zusammenhalt’, in Thym, D. and Klarmann, T. (eds.), Unionsbürgerschaft und Migration im aktuellen Europarecht (Baden-Baden: Nomos, 2017), pp. 4167.Google Scholar
Hammar, T., Democracy and the Nation-State. Aliens, Denizens and Citizens in a World of International Migration (Beatty: Avebury, 1990).Google Scholar
Hanf, D., ‘“Reverse Discrimination” in EU Law: Constitutional Aberration, Constitutional Necessity, or Judicial Choice?’ (2011) 18(1–2) Maastricht Journal of European and Comparative Law, 2961.Google Scholar
Hart, B. de, Strik, T. and Pankratz, H., Family Reunification: A Barrier or Facilitator of Integration?, The Country Report of the Netherlands (Family Reunification Project Document) (Brussels: European Commission, 2012).Google Scholar
Harvey, D., A Brief History of Neoliberalism (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005).Google Scholar
Haselbacher, M. and Hattmannsdorfer, H., ‘Desintegration in der Grundversorgung’ (2018) 3(3) Juridikum. Zeitschrift für kritik | recht | gesellschaft, 373385.Google Scholar
Hashimoto, N., ‘Refugee Resettlement as an Alternative to Asylum’ (2018) 37(2) Refugee Survey Quarterly, 162186.Google Scholar
Hatzopoulos, V., ‘Turkish Service Recipients under the EU–Turkey Association Agreement: Demirkan’ (2014) 51(3) Common Market Law Review, 647664.Google Scholar
Hecker, J., ‘Zur Europäisierung des Ausländerrechts’ (2011) (2) Zeitschrift für Ausländerrecht, 46–51.Google Scholar
Heckmann, F., ‘Integrationsweisen europäischer Gesellschaften: Erfolge, nationale Besonderheiten, Konvergenzen’, in Bade, K. J. (ed.), Migrationsreport 2004 (Frankfurt am Main: Campus Verlag, 2005), pp. 203224.Google Scholar
Heckmann, F., Integration von Migranten – Einwanderung und neue Nationenbildung (Wiesbaden: Springer, 2015).Google Scholar
Heymans, J., ‘U.S. Immigration Officers of Mexican Ancestry as Mexican Americans, Citizens and Immigration Police’ (2002) 43(3) Current Anthropology, 479507.Google Scholar
Hogan, G., ‘De Valera, the Constitution and the Historians’ (2005) 40 The Irish Jurist, 293320.Google Scholar
Hogan, G., and Whyte, G., Kelly: The Irish Constitution, 3rd ed. (Oxford: Butterworths, 2003).Google Scholar
Hogan, G., Whyte, G., Kenny, D., and Walsh, R., Kelly: The Irish Constitution, 5th ed. (London: Bloomsbury, 2018).Google Scholar
Hollifield, J. F., Immigrants, Markets, and States: The Political Economy of Postwar Europe (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1992).Google Scholar
Hollifield, J. F., ‘Migration and International Relations: Cooperation and Control in the European Community’ (1992) 23(2) International Migration Review, 568595.Google Scholar
Hollifield, J. F., ‘The Emerging Migration State’ (2004) 38(3) International Migration Review, 885912.Google Scholar
Hollifield, J. F., Hunt, V. F., and Tichenor, D. J., ‘Liberal Paradox: Immigrants, Markets and Rights in the United States’ (2008) 61(1) SMU Law Review, 6798.Google Scholar
Holtmaat, R., Grenzen aan gelijkheid (The Hague: Boom Juridische uitgevers, 2004).Google Scholar
Honohan, I., ‘Liberal and Republican Conceptions of Citizenship’, in Shachar, A., Bauböck, R., Bloemraad, I., and Vink, M. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Citizenship (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017), pp. 83106.Google Scholar
Houellebecq, M., Soumission (Paris: Flammarion, 2015).Google Scholar
Houtum, H. van, ‘Human Blacklisting: The Global Apartheid of the EU’s External Border Regime’ (2010) 28(6) Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 957976.Google Scholar
Houtum, H. van and Lagendijk, A., ‘Contextualising Regional Identity and Imagination in the Construction of New Policy Configurations for Polycentric Urban Regions, the Cases of the Ruhr Area and the Basque Country’ (2001) 38(4) Urban Studies, 743764.Google Scholar
Huijnk, W. and Andriessen, I., Integratie in zicht?: De integratie van migranten in Nederland op acht terreinen nader bekeken (Den Haag: Sociaal en Cultureel Planbureau, 2016).Google Scholar
Hunt, Alan, ‘The Theory of Critical Legal Studies’ (1986) 6(1) Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, 145.Google Scholar
Huntington, S. P., Who Are We? The Challenges to America’s National Identity (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2004).Google Scholar
Hüttermann, J., ‘Zur Soziogenese einer kulturalisierten Einwanderungsgesellschaft’, in Ezli, Ö., Kimmich, D., and Werberge, A. (eds.), Wider den Kulturenzwang (Bielefeld: transcript, 2009), pp. 95134.Google Scholar
Huysmans, J., ‘Migrants as a Security Problem: Dangers of “Securitizing” Societal Issues’, in Miles, R. and Thränhardt, D. (eds.), Migration and European Integration: The Dynamics of Inclusion and Exclusion (London: Pinter Publishers, 1995), pp. 5372.Google Scholar
Huysmans, J., ‘The European Union and the Securitization of Migration’ (2000) 38(5) JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies, 751777.Google Scholar
I newspaper, ‘We Are Leaving. Brexit Has Brought Racism into the Open’, I newspaper, 27 March 2019.Google Scholar
Ibrahim, M., ‘The Securitization of Migration: A Racial Discourse’ (2005) 43(5) International Migration, 163187.Google Scholar
Isin, E. F., ‘Performative Citizenship’, in Shachar, A., Bauböck, R., Bloemraad, I., and Vink, M. (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Citizenship (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017), pp. 500523.Google Scholar
Jabko, N. and Luhman, M., ‘Reconfiguring Sovereignty: Crisis, Politicization, and European Integration’ (2019) 26(7) Journal of European Public Policy, 10371055.Google Scholar
Jackson, P. (ed.), Race and Racism: Essays in Social Geography (Abingdon: Routledge, 2002).Google Scholar
Jaskułowski, K., The Everyday Politics of Migrant Crisis in Poland: Between Nationalism, Fear and Empathy (Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019).Google Scholar
Jeannet, A., ‘Internal Migration and Public Opinion about the European Union: A Time Series Cross-sectional Study’ (2018) 34(1) Socio-Economic Review, 122.Google Scholar
Jesse, M., ‘Missing in Action: Effective Protection for Third-Country Nationals from Discrimination under Community Law’, in Guild, E., Carrera, S., and Groenendijk, K. (eds.), Illiberal Liberal States: Immigration, Citizenship and Integration in the EU Discrimination under Community Law (Farnham: Ashgate, 2009), pp. 187205.Google Scholar
Jesse, M., ‘Inburgering in het buitenland: Vraagtekens bij rechtmatigheid vanuit Europees perspectief’, (2012) 4(4) Asiel & Migrantenrecht, 202206.Google Scholar
Jesse, M., ‘Joined Cases C-424/10, Tomasz Ziółkowski v. Land Berlin, and C-425/10, Barbara Szeja, Maria-Magdalena Szeja, Marlon Szeja v. Land Berlin’ (2012) 49(6) Common Market Law Review, 20032017.Google Scholar
Jesse, M., ‘“Disrupting and Annoying” – EU Citizenship and EU Migration Law Destroying Old Habits of National Migration Policy Making’, in de Visser, M. and van der Mei, A. P. (eds.), The Treaty on European Union 1993–2013: Reflections from Maastricht (Antwerp: Intersentia, 2013), pp. 407428.Google Scholar
Jesse, M., ‘The Selection of Migrants Through Law – A Closer Look at Regulation Governing Family Reunification in the EU’, in Anthias, F. and Pajnik, M. (eds.), Contesting Integration, Engendering Migration: Theory and Practice (Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014), pp. 86101.Google Scholar
Jesse, M., ‘Integration Measures, Integration Exams, and Immigration Control: P and S and K and A’ (2016) 53(4) Common Market Law Review, 10651087.Google Scholar
Jesse, M., ‘Legal Risks from, to, and within EU Migration Law: An Inventory’, in Miscenic, E. and Raccah, A. (eds.), Legal Risks in EU Law – Interdisciplinary Studies on Legal Risk Management and Better Regulation in Europe (Milton Keynes: Springer, 2016), pp. 183198.Google Scholar
Jesse, M., ‘The Unlawfulness of Existing Pre-departure Integration Conditions Applied in Family Reunification Scenarios – Urgent Need to Change National Laws in the European Union’ (2016) 2(3) International Journal of Migration and Border Studies, 274288.Google Scholar
Jesse, M., The Civic Citizens of Europe: The Legal Potential for Immigrant Integration in the EU, Belgium, Germany and the United Kingdom (Leiden: Brill, 2017).Google Scholar
Jesse, M. and Carter, D., ‘Life after the “Dano-Trilogy”: Legal Certainty, Choices and Limitations in EU Citizenship Case Law’, in Kochenov, D., Cambien, N., and Muir, E. (eds.), Citizenship of the Union (Leiden: Brill/Nijhoff, 2020).Google Scholar
Johnson, K. R., ‘Race Matters. Immigration Law and Policy Scholarship, Law in the Ivory Tower, and the Legal Indifference of the Race Critique’ (2000) University of Illinois Law Review, 525–557.Google Scholar
Joppke, C., The Secular State Under Siege. Religion and Politics in Europe and America (Cambridge: Polity, 2015).Google Scholar
Joppke, C., Is Multiculturalism Dead? Crisis and Persistence in the Constitutional State (Cambridge: Polity, 2016).Google Scholar
Joppke, C., ‘Civic Integration in Western Europe: Three Debates’ (2017) 40(6) West European Politics, 11531176.Google Scholar
Joppke, C. and Torpey, J., Legal Integration of Islam: A Transnational Comparison (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Kalecki, M., ‘Political Aspects of Full Employment’ (1943) 14(4) The Political Quarterly, 322331.Google Scholar
Karolewski, I., ‘European Identity Making and Identity Transfer’ (2011) 63(6) Europe-Asia Studies, 935955.Google Scholar
Kau, M., ‘Sanktionsmöglichkeiten zur Durchsetzung von Integrationsanforderungen’ (2007) 27(5–6) Zeitschrift für Ausländerrecht und Ausländerpolitik, 186191.Google Scholar
Kawar, L., Contesting Immigration Policy in Court. Legal Activism and its Radiating Effects in the United States and France (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Kazharski, A., ‘The End of “Central Europe”? The Rise of the Radical Right and the Contestation of Identities in Slovakia and the Visegrad Four’ (2018) 23(4) Geopolitics, 754780.Google Scholar
Kelly, J. M., ‘The Constitution: Law and Manifesto’, in Litton, Frank (ed.), The Constitution of Ireland 1937–1987 (Dublin: IPA, 1987), pp. 208217.Google Scholar
Kelman, H. C., ‘Violence without Moral Restraint: Reflections on the Dehumanization of Victims and Victimizers’ (1973) 29(4) Journal of Social Issues, 2561.Google Scholar
Kelman, H. C. and Hamilton, V. L., Crimes of Obedience: Toward a Social Psychology of Authority and Responsibility (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1989).Google Scholar
Keogh, D. and McCarthy, A., The Making of the Irish Constitution 1937 (Cork: Mercier Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Kerwin, D., ‘Immigrant Rights, Integration and the Common Good’, in Fix, Michael (ed.), Securing the Future, US Immigrant Integration Policy, A Reader (Washington, DC: Migration Policy Institute, 2006), pp. 4556.Google Scholar
Kiberd, D., Inventing Ireland: The Literature of a Modern Nation (New York: Random House, 1995).Google Scholar
Kinvall, C., ‘The Postcolonial Has Moved into Europe. Bordering, Security and Ethno-Cultural Belonging’ (2016) 54(1) Journal of Common Market Studies, 152168.Google Scholar
Kjaerum, M., ‘Human Rights for Immigrants and Immigrants for Human Rights’, in Guild, Elspeth and Van Selm, J. (eds.), International Migration and Security: Opportunities and Challenges (London: Routledge, 2005), pp. 4155.Google Scholar
Klabbers, J., ‘On Epistemic Universalism and the Melancholy of International Law’ (2018) 29(4) European Journal of International Law, 10571069.Google Scholar
Klaver, F. I. and Odé, A. W. M., Civic Integration and Modern Citizenship: The Netherlands in Perspective (Amsterdam: Europa Law Publishing, 2009).Google Scholar
Knappert, L., Kornau, A., and Figengül, M., ‘Refugees’ Exclusion at Work and the Intersection with Gender: Insights from the Turkish–Syrian Border’ (2018) 105(1) Journal of Vocational Behavior, 6282.Google Scholar
Kochenov, D., ‘Mevrouw De Jong Gaat Eten – Naturalization Biases Tested in Practice’, in Acosta, D. and Wiesbrock, A. (eds.), Global Migration – Old Assumptions, New Dynamics (Santa Barbara: Praeger, 2015), vol. II, pp. 161176.Google Scholar
Kochenov, D., ‘The Citizenship of Personal Circumstances in Europe’, in Thym, D. (ed.), Questioning EU Citizenship: Judges and Limits of Free Movement and Solidarity in the EU (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2017), pp. 3756.Google Scholar
Kochenov, D., ‘On Tiles and Pillars: EU Citizenship as a Federal Denominator’, in Kochenov, D. (ed.), EU Citizenship and Federalism: The Role of Rights (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), pp. 382.Google Scholar
Kochenov, D. and Pirker, B., ‘Deporting the Citizens within the European Union: A Counter-Intuitive Trend in Case C-348/09, P.I. v. Oberbürgermeisterin der Stadt Remscheid’ (2013) 19(2) Columbia Journal of European Law, 369391.Google Scholar
Kolbaşı-Muyan, G., Avrupa’da Göçmen Politikaları: Almanya, Hollanda ve Fransa Özelinde Göçmen Politikalarının Karşılaştırması (Ankara: Detay Yayıncılık, 2018).Google Scholar
Kontos, M., ‘Restrictive Integration Policies and the Construction of the Migrant as “Unwilling to Integrate”: The Case of Germany’, in Anthias, A. F. and Pajnik, M. (eds.), Contesting Integration, Engendering Migration – Theory and Practice (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2014), pp. 125142.Google Scholar
Korteweg, A. and Yurdakul, G., ‘Islam, Gender, and Immigrant Integration: Boundary Drawing in Discourses on Honour Killing in the Netherlands and Germany’ (2009) 32(2) Ethnic and Racial Studies, 218238.Google Scholar
Kostakopoulou, D., Citizenship, Identity and Immigration in the European Union: Between Past and Future (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2001).Google Scholar
Kostakopoulou, D., The Future Governance of Citizenship (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Kostakopoulou, D., ‘The Anatomy of Civic Integration’ (2010) 73(6) Modern Law Review, 933958.Google Scholar
Kostakopoulou, D., ‘Co-creating European Union Citizenship: Institutional Process and Crescive Norms’, (2012–2013) 15 Cambridge Yearbook of European Legal Studies, 255282.Google Scholar
Kostakopoulou, D., ‘The Anatomy of Civic Integration’, in Anthias, F. (ed.), Contesting Integration, Engendering Migration. Vol. 50 (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014), pp. 3763.Google Scholar
Kostakopoulou, D., ‘What Fractures Political Unions? Failed Federations, Brexit and the Importance of Political Commitment’ (2017) 42(3) European Law Review, 339352.Google Scholar
Kostakopoulou, D. and Ferreira, D., ‘Testing Liberal Norms: The Public Policy and Public Security Derogations and the Cracks in European Union Citizenship’ (2014) 20(1) Columbia Journal of European Law, 167192.Google Scholar
Kountouris, N., ‘The Concept of Worker in European Labour Law: Fragmentation, Autonomy and Scope’ (2018) 47(2) Industrial Law Journal, 192225.Google Scholar
Koutrakos, P., ‘Public Security Exceptions and EU Free Movement Law’, in Koutrakos, P., Nic Shuibhne, N., and Sypris, P. (eds.), Exceptions from EU Free Movement Law (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2016), pp. 190217.Google Scholar
Kovács, K., ‘The Rise of an Ethnocultural Constitutional Identity in the Jurisprudence of the East Central European Courts’ (2017) 18(7) German Law Journal, 17031720.Google Scholar
Kramer, D., ‘Earning Social Citizenship in the European Union: Free Movement and Access to Social Assistance Benefits Reconstructed’ (2016) 18 Cambridge Yearbook of European Legal Studies, 270301.Google Scholar
Kramer, D., ‘From Worker to Self-entrepreneur: The Transformation of homo economicus and the Freedom of Movement in the European Union’ (2017) 23(3–4) European Law Journal, 172188.Google Scholar
Krause, U., Researching Forced Migration: Critical Reflections on Research Ethics during Fieldwork (Working Paper Series No. 123, Refugee Studies Center, Oxford University, 2017).Google Scholar
Kreichauf, R., ‘From Forced Migration to Forced Arrival: The Campization of Refugee Accommodation in European Cities’ (2018) 6(7) Comparative Migration Studies.Google Scholar
Küçük, E., ‘The Principle of Solidarity and Fairness in Sharing Responsibility’ (2016) 22(4) European Law Journal, 448469.Google Scholar
Kulu-Glasgow, I. and Leerkes, A., ‘Restricting Turkish Marriage Migration? National Policy, Couples’ Coping Strategies and International Obligations’ (2013) 10(3) Migration Letters, 369382.Google Scholar
Kuus, M., ‘Europe’s Eastern Expansion and the Reinscription of Otherness in East-Central Europe’ (2004) 28(4) Progress in Human Geography, 472489.Google Scholar
Kymlicka, W., ‘Nation-Building and Minority Rights: Comparing West and East’ (2000) 26(2) Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 183212.Google Scholar
Kymlicka, W., ‘Multiculturalism and Minority Rights: West and East’ (2002) 4(4) Journal of Ethnopolitics and Minority Issues in Europe, 126.Google Scholar
Kymlicka, W., ‘Liberal Nationalism and Cosmopolitan Justice’, in Post, R. (ed.), Another Cosmopolitanism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006), pp. 128144.Google Scholar
Kymlicka, W., Multicultural Odysseys. Navigating the New International Politics of Diversity (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Kymlicka, W., ‘The Rise and Fall of Multiculturalism? New Debates on Inclusion and Accommodation in Diverse Societies’ (2010) 61(199) International Social Science Journal, 97112.Google Scholar
Lack, J., ‘M 99 Tania Bruguera and Immigrant Movement International’, in Lack, J. (ed.), Why Are We ‘Artists’? 100 World Art Manifestos (St Ives: Penguin Random House, 2017), M99.Google Scholar
Lahav, G., ‘International Versus National Constraints in Family-Reunification Migration Policy’ (1997) 3(3) Global Governance, 349372.Google Scholar
Lavenex, S., ‘“Failing Forward” towards Which Europe? Organized Hypocrisy in the Common European Asylum System: “Failing Forward” towards Which Europe?’ (2018) 56(5) JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies, 11951212.Google Scholar
Lenaerts, K. and Gutiérrez-Fons, J. A., To Say What the Law of the EU Is: Methods of Interpretation and the European Court of Justice (EUI AEL Working Papers, 2013/9).Google Scholar
Lentin, A. and Titley, G., The Crises of Multiculturalism: Racism in a Neoliberal Age (London: Zed Books, 2011).Google Scholar
Levitsky, S. and Way, L. A., ‘The Rise of Competitive Authoritarianism’ (2002) 13(2) Journal of Democracy, 5166.Google Scholar
Liguori, M., ‘Prefetto vicario indagato: «Favoriva gli appalti per i centri migranti»’, Il Gazzettino, 9 August 2018.Google Scholar
Linke, U., German Bodies: Race and Representation after Hitler (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1999).Google Scholar
Lipsky, M., Street-Level Bureaucracy: Dilemmas of the Individual in Public Services (New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1980).Google Scholar
Local Government Association, Guide for Local Authorities on Syrian Refugee Resettlement (London: Local Government Association, 30 June 2016).Google Scholar
Loftus, B., ‘Border Regimes and the Sociology of Policing’ (2015) 25(1) Policing and Society, 115125.Google Scholar
Lübbe-Wolff, G., Homogenes Volk - Über Homogenitätspostulate und Integration’ (2007) 27(4) Zeitschrift für Ausländerrecht und Ausländerpolitik, 121127.Google Scholar
Lucassen, L., ‚Assimilation in Westeuropa seit der Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts: Historische und histographische Erfahrungen’, in Bommes, M., Münz, R., and Bade, K. J. (eds.), Migrationsreport 2004 (Frankfurt am Main: Campus Verlag, 2004), pp. 4366.Google Scholar
Lucassen, G. and Lubbers, M., ‘Who Fears What? Explaining Far-Right-Wing Preference in Europe by Distinguishing Perceived Cultural and Economic Ethnic Threats’ (2012) 45(5) Comparative Political Studies, 547574.Google Scholar
Lucie, C., ‘Understanding the Diversity of EU Migration Policy in Practice: The Implementation of the Blue Card Initiative’ (2013) 34(2) Policy Studies, 180200.Google Scholar
Lugosi, P., Janta, H., and Wilczek, B., ‘Work(ing) Dynamics of Migrant Networking among Poles Employed in Hospitality and Food Production’ (2016) 64(4) Sociological Review, 894911.Google Scholar
Lynch, M., ‘Backpacking the Border: The Intersection of Drug and Immigration Prosecution in a High-Volume US Court’ (2017) 57(1) British Journal of Criminology, 112131.Google Scholar
Lynch, P., The Politics of Nationhood: Sovereignty, Britishness and Conservative Politics (Houndmills, Basingstoke: Macmillan Press, 1999).Google Scholar
Lyon, D., ‘Surveillance, Security and Social Sorting: Emerging Research Priorities’ (2007) 17(1) International Criminal Justice Review, 161170.Google Scholar
Maas, W., ‘Free Movement and Discrimination: Evidence from Europe, the United States, and Canada’ (2013) 15(1) European Journal of Migration and Law, 91110.Google Scholar
Maduro, P. M., ‘Interpreting European Law’ (2007) 2(2) European Journal of Legal Studies, 121.Google Scholar
Mantu, S. A., ‘Concepts of Time and EU Citizenship’ (2013) 15(4) European Journal of Migration and Law, 447464.Google Scholar
Mantu, S. A., ‘Citizenship Deprivation in the UK’ (2014) 19(1–2) Tilburg Law Review, 163170.Google Scholar
Marchetti, C., ‘Rifugiati e migranti forzati in Itália: il pendolo tra “emergenza” e “sistema”’ (2014) 22(43) REMHU: Revista Interdisciplinar da Mobilidade Humana, 5370.Google Scholar
Margry, P. J. and Roodenburg, H., Reframing Dutch Culture – Between Otherness and Authenticity (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007).Google Scholar
Maritain, J., Human Rights: Comments and Interpretations: A Symposium (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1973).Google Scholar
Marsh, D. and Rhodes, R. A. W., Policy Networks in British Politics (Oxford: Clarendon Press Oxford, 1992).Google Scholar
Marshall, T. H., Citizenship and Social Class: And Other Essays (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1950).Google Scholar
Marshall, T. H., Class, Citizenship, and Social Development (Garden City, NY: Anchor Books, 1965).Google Scholar
Mayblin, L. and James, P., ‘Asylum and Refugee Support in the UK: Civil Society Filling the Gaps?’ (2019) 45(3) Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 375394.Google Scholar
McCormack-George, D., ‘Asylum Seekers and the Right to Work in Irish Law: NVH v Minister for Justice and Equality’ (2019) 61(1) Irish Jurist, 172193.Google Scholar
McCruden, C., ‘Human Dignity and Judicial Interpretation of Human Rights’ (2008) 19(4) European Journal of International Law, 655723.Google Scholar
McCulloch, J. and Tham, J., ‘Secret State, Transparent Subject: The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation in the Age of Terror’ (2005) 38(3) Australian and New Zealand Journal of Criminology, 400415.Google Scholar
McDowell, M. (Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform), ‘Proposed Citizenship Referendum’, Sunday Independent, 14 March 2004.Google Scholar
McKay, S., Jefferys, S., Paraksevopoulou, A., and Keles, J., Study on Precarious Work and Social Rights, VT/2010/084 (London: Working Lives Institute, 2012).Google Scholar
Meduna, M., ‘“Scelestus Europeus Sum”: What Protection against Expulsion Does EU Citizenship Offer to European Offenders?’, in Kochenov, D. (ed.), EU Citizenship and Federalism, The Role of Rights (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), pp. 394416.Google Scholar
Michelman, F. I., ‘Law’s Republic’ (1988) 97(8) Yale Law Journal, 14931537.Google Scholar
Mignolo, W. D. and Tlostanova, M. V., ‘Theorizing from the Borders: Shifting to Geo- and Body-Politics of Knowledge’ (2006) 9(2) European Journal of Social Theory, 205221.Google Scholar
Miller, D., Strangers in our Midsts – the Political Philosophy of Immigration (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Minderhout, P. and Mantu, S., ‘Back to the Roots? No Access to Social Assistance for Union Citizens Who Are Economically Inactive’, in Thym, D. (ed.), Questioning EU Citizenship: Judges and Limits of Free Movement and Solidarity in the EU (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2017), pp. 191207.Google Scholar
Morano-Foadi, S., ‘Solidarity and Responsibility: Advancing Humanitarian Responses to EU Migratory Pressures’ (2017) 19(3) European Journal of Migration and Law, 223254.Google Scholar
Morano-Foadi, S. and Andreadakis, S., ‘The Convergence of the European Legal System in the Treatment of Third-Country Nationals in Europe: The ECJ and ECtHR Jurisprudence’ (2011) 22(4) European Journal of International Law, 10711088.Google Scholar
Moreno-Lax, V., Accessing Asylum in Europe – Extraterritorial Border Controls and Refugee Rights under EU Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017).Google Scholar
Moreno-Lax, V., ‘Solidarity’s Reach’ (2017) 24(5) Maastricht Journal of European and Comparative Law, 740762.Google Scholar
Moreno-Lax, V., ‘The EU Humanitarian Border and the Securitization of Human Rights: The “Rescue-through-Interdiction/Rescue-without-Protection” Paradigm’ (2018) 56(1) Journal of Common Market Studies, 119140.Google Scholar
Moreno-Lax, V. and Lemberg-Pedersen, M., ‘Border-Induced Displacement: The Ethical and Legal Implications of Distance-Creation through Externalization’ (2019) 56(1) Questions of International Law, Zoom-in, 533.Google Scholar
Möschel, M., Law, Lawyers and Race – Critical Race Theory from the United States to Europe (Abingdon: Routledge, 2014).Google Scholar
Mourão Permoser, J., ‘Redefining Membership. Restrictive Rights and Categorisation in European Union Migration Policy’ (2017) 43(15) Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 25362555.Google Scholar
Mullally, S., ‘The Irish Supreme Court and the Illegal Immigrants (Trafficking) Bill, 1999’ (2002) 13(3) International Journal of Refugee Law, 354362.Google Scholar
Müller, J.-W., Contesting Democracy. Political Ideas in Twentieth-Century Europe (Yale: Yale University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Müller, J.-W., What Is Populism? (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2016).Google Scholar
Murphy, C., Immigration, Integration and the Law – The Intersection of Domestic, EU and International Legal Regimers (London: Routledge, 2013).Google Scholar
Murphy, C., ‘Challenging Deportation on the Basis of “Private Life”: The Evolving Impact of Article 8 on Irish Immigration Law’, in Egan, S., Thornton, L., and Walsh, J. (eds.), Ireland and the European Convention on Human Rights: 60 Years and Beyond (London: Bloomsbury, 2014), pp. 183200.Google Scholar
Murphy, C. and Ryan, D., ‘Work, Dignity and Non-Citizens: Reflections from the Irish Constitutional Order’ (2019) (1) Public Law, 30–40.Google Scholar
Murphy, W. F., ‘Constitutions, Constitutionalism and Democracy’ in Greenberg, D., Katz, S. N., Oliviero, M. B., and Wheatley, S. C. (eds.), Constitutionalism and Democracy: Transitions in the Contemporary World (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993), pp. 326.Google Scholar
Murray, T., ‘Socio-Economic Rights and the Making of the 1937 Irish Constitution’ (2016) 31(4) Irish Political Studies, 502524.Google Scholar
Myers, G., ‘Other/Otherness’, in Warf, B. (ed.), Encyclopedia of Human Geography (Thousand-Oaks: Sage, 2006), pp. 345347.Google Scholar
Nagl-Docekal, H. (ed.), Politische Theorie: Differenz und Lebensqualität Dt. Erstausg., 1. Aufl ed. (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1996).Google Scholar
Neuvonen, P. J., ‘Retrieving the „Subject“ of European Integration’ (2019) 25(1) European Law Journal, 620.Google Scholar
Newman, D., Borders and Bordering: Towards an Interdisciplinary Dialogue (2006) 9(2) European Journal of Social Theory, 171186.Google Scholar
Nic Shuibhne, N., ‘Free Movement of Persons and the Wholly Internal Rule: Time to Move On?’ (2002) 39(4) Common Market Law Review, 731771.Google Scholar
Nic Shuibhne, N., ‘The Resilience of EU Market Citizenship’ (2010) 47(6) Common Market Law Review, 15971628.Google Scholar
Nic Shuibhne, N., ‘Limits Rising, Duties Ascending: The Changing Legal Shape of Union Citizenship’ (2015) 52(4) Common Market Law Review, 889938.Google Scholar
Nic Shuibhne, N., ‘Recasting EU Citizenship as Federal Citizenship: What Are the Implications for the Citizen When the Polity Bargain Is Privileged?’, in Kochenov, D. (ed.), EU Citizenship and Federalism: The Role of Rights (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), pp. 147177.Google Scholar
Niemann, A. and Zaun, N., ‘EU Refugee Policies and Politics in Times of Crisis: Theoretical and Empirical Perspectives’ (2018) 56(1) JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies, 322.Google Scholar
O'Brien, C., ‘I Trade, Therefore I Am. Legal Personhood in the European Union’ (2013) 50(6) Common Market Law Review, 16431684.Google Scholar
O'Brien, C., ‘Civis Capitalist Sum: Class as the New Guiding Principle of EU Free Movement Rights’ (2016) 53(4) Common Market Law Review, 937978.Google Scholar
O'Brien, C., Unity in Adversity: EU Citizenship, Social Justice and the Cautionary Tale of the UK (Oxford: Hart, 2017).Google Scholar
O'Brien, C., ‘The ECJ Sacrifices EU Citizenship in Vain: Commission v United Kingdom’ (2017) 54(1) Common Market Law Review, 209243.Google Scholar
O'Brien, C., Spavanta, E., and de Coninck, J., Comparative Report 2015 The Concept of Worker under Article 45 TFEU and Certain Non-standard Forms of Employment (Brussels: FresSco & DG for Employment Social Affairs and Inclusion, 2016).Google Scholar
O'Donnell, G., ‘Human Development, Human Rights and Democracy’, in O'Donnell, G., Cullel, J. V., and Iazzetta, O. (eds.), The Quality of Democracy. Theory and Applications (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2004), pp. 992.Google Scholar
O’Leary, S., European Union Citizenship: The Options for Reform (London: IPPR, 1996).Google Scholar
O’Mahony, C., ‘There Is No Such Thing as a Right to Dignity’ (2012) 10(2) International Journal of Constitutional Law, 551574.Google Scholar
O'Mahony, C., ‘The Dignity of the Individual in Irish Constitutional Law’, in Grimm, D., Kemmerer, A., and Mullers, C. (eds.), Human Dignity in Context (Baden-Baden: Hart Publishing, 2016), pp. 469498.Google Scholar
O'Mahony, C., ‘Unenumerated Rights after NHV?’ (2017) 40(2) Dublin University Law Journal, 171190.Google Scholar
O'Sullivan, M., ‘The Ethics of Resettlement: Australia and the Asia-Pacific Region’ (2016) 20(2) The International Journal of Human Rights, 241263.Google Scholar
Oers, R. van, Erbsoll, E., and Kostakopoulou, D., A Redefinition of Belonging? Language and Integration Tests in Europe (Leiden: Martinus Nijhoff, 2010).Google Scholar
Oesch, M., Switzerland and the European Union: General Framework, Bilateral Agreements, Autonomous Adaptation (Zürich: Dike Verlag AG, 2018).Google Scholar
Offe, C., ‘Homogeneity and Constitutional Democracy’ (1998) 6(2) The Journal of Political Philosophy, 113141.Google Scholar
OIM, Thematic Paper on Integration and Social Cohesion, Key Elements for Reaping the Benefits of Migration (2011).Google Scholar
Okhonmina, S., ‘States without Borders: Westphalia Territoriality under Threat’ (2010) 24(3) Journal of Social Sciences, 177182.Google Scholar
Olivius, E., ‘Refugee Men As Perpetrators, Allies or Troublemakers? Emerging Discourses on Men and Masculinities in Humanitarian Aid’ (2016) 56(1) Women’s Studies International Forum, 5665.Google Scholar
Orgad, L., The Cultural Defense of Nations: A Liberal Theory of Majority Rights (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015).Google Scholar
Ortega y Gasset, J., Man and Crisis (London: George Allen and Unwin, 1957).Google Scholar
Orwell, G., The Road to Wigan Pier (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1958).Google Scholar
Paasi, A., ‘Region and Place: Regional Identity in Question’ (2003) 27(4) Progress in Human Geography, 475485.Google Scholar
Paasi, A., ‘Bounded Spaces in a “Borderless World”. Border Studies, Power and the Anatomy of Territory’ (2009) 2(2) Journal of Power, 213234.Google Scholar
Parekh, B., A New Politcs of Identity (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2008).Google Scholar
Pascouau, Y. and De Bruckyer, P., ‘Integration and Access to Nationality in EU Member Countries’, in OECD, Naturalisation: A Passport for the Better Integration of Immigrants? (Paris: OECD Publishing, 2011), p. 252.Google Scholar
Pascouau, Y. and Strik, T., Which Integration Policies for Migrants? Interaction between the EU and its Member States (Nijmegen: Wolf Legal Publishers, 2012).Google Scholar
Patočka, J., ‘What Is and What Is Not Charter 77’, in Goetz-Stankiewicz, M. (ed.), Good-bye, Samizdat: Twenty Years of Czechoslovak Underground Writing (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1992), pp. 142144.Google Scholar
Peers, S., ‘Analysis 5 of the Revised Brexit Withdrawal Agreement’, EULawAnalysis, 29 October 2019.Google Scholar
Pennings, F., ‘EU Citizenship: Access to Social Benefits in other Member States’ (2012) 28(3) International Journal of Comparative Labour Law and Industrial Relations, 307333.Google Scholar
Penninx, R., ‘Integration of Migrants: Economic, Social, Cultural and Political Dimensions’, in MacDonald, A. L. (ed.), The New Demographic Regime – Population Challenges and Policy Responses (New York: United Nations, 2005), pp. 137151.Google Scholar
Perschner, J., Labour Market Performance of Refugees in the EU (Brussels: European Commission, 2017).Google Scholar
Phillimore, J. and Goodson, L., ‘Problem or Opportunity? Asylum Seekers, Refugees, Employment and Social Exclusion in Deprived Urban Areas’ (2006) 43(10) Urban Studies, 17151736.Google Scholar
Pickering, S., ‘Original Deviance and Normality: Representations of Asylum Seekers and Refugees in the Australian Press’ (2001) 14(2) Journal of Refugee Studies, 169186.Google Scholar
Pieper, T., Die Gegenwart der Lager: zur Mikrophysik der Herrschaft in der deutschen Flüchtlingspolitik, 1. Aufl ed. (Münster: Westfälisches Dampfboot, 2008).Google Scholar
Pieper, T., ‘Lager als variables Instrument der Migrationskontrolle’, in Hess, S. and Kasparek, B. (eds.), Grenzregime. Diskurse, Praktiken, Institutionen in Europa (Berlin: Assoziation A, 2010), pp. 219228.Google Scholar
Polanyi, K., The Great Transformation (Boston: Beacon Press, 1944).Google Scholar
Porthé, V., Ahonen, E., Vázquez, M. L., Pope, C., Alonso Agudelo, A., García, A. M., Amable, M., Benavides, F. G., and Benach, J., ‘Extending a Model of Precarious Employment: A Qualitative Study of Immigrant Workers in Spain’ (2010) 53(4) American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 417424.Google Scholar
Pratt, A., Securing Borders Detention and Deportation in Canada (Toronto: UCB Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Přibáň, J., ‘The Juridification of Identity, its Limitations and the Search of EU Democratic Politics’ (2009) 16(1) Constellations, 4458.Google Scholar
Pronin, E., Lin, D. Y., and Ross, L., ‘The Blind Spot: Perceptions of Bias in Self Versus Others’ (2002) 28(3) Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 369381.Google Scholar
Pudlat, A., Perceptibility and Experience of Inner-European Borders by Institutionalized Border Protection (2010) 29(4) Questions Geographicae, 713.Google Scholar
Queiroz, B., Illegally Staying in the EU (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2018).Google Scholar
Raj, K. V., ‘Paradoxes on the Borders of Europe’ (2006) 8(4) International Feminist Journal of Politics, 512534.Google Scholar
Rea, A., Bonjour, S., and Jacobs, D., ‘Introduction’, in Bonjour, S., Rea, A., and Jacobs, D. (eds.), The Others in Europe (Brussels: Editions de l’Université Bruxelles, 2011), pp. 719.Google Scholar
Recchi, E., Mobile Europe. The Theory and Practice of Free Movement in the EU (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015).Google Scholar
Redfield, P., ‘Doctors, Borders, and Life in Crisis’ (2005) 20(3) Cultural Anthropology, 328361.Google Scholar
Remigi, E., De Cruz, H., Blackburn, P., Killwick, C., Williams, D., and Pybus, S. (eds.), In Limbo: Brexit Testimonies from EU Citizens in the UK, 2nd ed. (London: Byline Books, 2018).Google Scholar
Rettberg, J. W. and Gajjala, R., ‘Terrorists or Ccowards: Negative Portrayals of Male Syrian Refugees in Social Media’ (2016) 16(2) Feminist Media Studies, 178181.Google Scholar
Risak, M. and Dullinger, T., The Concept of ‘Worker’ in EU Law: Status Quo and Potential for Change (ETUI Report 140, 2018).Google Scholar
Rodin, S. and Perišin, T., ‘The European Critical Legal Studies Perspective’, in Rodin, S. and Perišin, T. (eds.), The Transformation or Reconstitution of Europe (Oxford: Bloomsbury Hart Publishing, 2018), pp. 316.Google Scholar
Rodriguez, N., ‘The Battle for the Border: Notes on Autonomous Migration, Transnational Communities, and the State’, in Jonas, S. and Dod Thomas, S. (eds.), Immigration: A Civil Rights Issue for the Americas (Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, 1998), pp. 4650.Google Scholar
Rosenberg, G. N., The Hollow Hope. Can Courts Bring about Social Change?, 2nd ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Rosenberger, S. and Konig, A., ‘Welcoming the Unwelcome: The Politics of Minimum Reception Standards for Asylum Seekers in Austria’ (2012) 25(4) Journal of Refugee Studies, 537554.Google Scholar
Rosenberger, S., Stern, V., and Merhaut, N. (eds.), Protest Movements in Asylum and Deportation (Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018).Google Scholar
Ross, B. (ed.), Migration, Geschlecht und Staatsbürgerschaft: Perspektiven für eine antirassistische und feministische Politik und Politikwissenschaft, 1. Aufl ed. (Wiesbaden: VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, 2004).Google Scholar
Roy, O., ‘Islam in Europe: An Ordinary Religion Like Any Other’, in Haenni, P. and Lathion, S. (eds.), The Swiss Minaret Ban: Islam in Question (Fribourg: Religoscope Institute, 2011), pp. 9095.Google Scholar
Rubio-Marín, R., ‘Integration in Immigrant Europe: Human Rights at a Crossroads’, in Rubio-Marín, R. (ed.), Human Rights and Immigration (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014), pp. 73105.Google Scholar
Ruffer, G., ‘Pushed beyond Recognition? The Liberality of Family Reunification Policies in the EU’ (2011) 37(6) Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 935951.Google Scholar
Ruggie, J., ‘International Regimes, Transactions and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order’ (1982) 36(2) International Organisation, 379415.Google Scholar
Ruiz, I. and Vargas-Silva, C., ‘Differences in Labour Market Outcomes between Natives, Refugees and Other Migrants in the UK’ (2018) 18(4) Journal of Economic Geography, 855885.Google Scholar
Rygiel, K., ‘Bordering Solidarities: Migrant Activism and the Politics of Movement and Camps at Calais’ (2011) 15(1) Citizenship Studies, 119.Google Scholar
Rygiel, K., ‘Politicizing Camps: Forging Transgressive Citizenships in and through Transit’ (2012) 16(5–6) Citizenship Studies, 807825.Google Scholar
Šadl, U. and Sankari, S., ‘Why Did the Citizenship Jurisprudence Change?’, in Thym, D. (ed.), Questioning EU Citizenship: Judges and Limits of Free Movement and Solidarity in the EU (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2017), pp. 89110.Google Scholar
Said, E., Orientalism (New York: Pantheon Books, 1978).Google Scholar
Santner, M., Leiden Christen mehr unter Giftgas? (Berlin: Rotes Kreuz, 2013).Google Scholar
Sarmiento, D. and Sharpston, E., ‘European Citizenship and Its New Union: Time to Move on?’, in Kochenov, D. (ed.), EU Citizenship and Federalism – The Role of Rights (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), pp. 226242.Google Scholar
Sarrazin, T., Deutschland schafft sich ab. Wie wir unser Land aufs Spiel setzen (München: DVA, 2010).Google Scholar
Sassen, S., Guests and Aliens (New York: New Press, 1999).Google Scholar
Schain, M., ‘The State Strikes Back: Immigration Policy in the European Union’ (2009) 20(1) European Journal of International Law, 93109.Google Scholar
Schedler, A., (ed.), Electoral Authoritarianism: The Dynamics of Unfree Competition (Boulder: Lynne Rienner, 2006).Google Scholar
Scheppele, K. L., ‘Autocratic Legalism’ (2018) 85(3) University of Chicago Law Review, 545583.Google Scholar
Schiek, D., ‘Perspectives on Social Citizenship in the EU: From Status Positivus to Status Socialis Activus via Two Forms of Transnational Solidarity’, in Kochenov, D. (ed.), EU Citizenship and Federalism: The Role of Rights (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), pp. 341370.Google Scholar
Schiek, D. and Waddington, L., Cases, Materials and Text on National, Supranational and International Non-discrimination Law (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2007).Google Scholar
Schmitt, C., The Concept of the Political, 2nd ed. (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2007).Google Scholar
Schmitter, P. C. and Karl, T., ‘What Democracy Is and Is Not’, in Diamond, L. and Plattner, M. (eds.), The Global Resurgence of Democracy (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993), pp. 316.Google Scholar
Schotel, B., On the Right of Exclusion. Law, Ethics and Immigration Policy (New York: Routledge, 2012).Google Scholar
Schweitzer, R., ‘A Stratified Right to Family Life? On the Logic(s) and Legitimacy of Granting Differential Access to Family Reunification for Third-Country Nationals Living within the EU’ (2015) 41(13) Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 21302148.Google Scholar
Scott, C., ‘Private Regulation of the Public Sector: A Neglected Facet of Contemporary Governance’ (2002) 29(1) Journal of Law and Society, 5676.Google Scholar
Sekulová, M. and Hlinčíková, M., ‘Integration of Migrants and Refugees in Slovakia: The Perspective of Policies, Programmes and Their Outcomes’, in Kucharczyk, J. and Mesežnikov, G. (eds.), Phantom Menace: The Politics and Policies of Migration in Central Europe (Bratislava: Institute for Public Affairs and Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung, 2018), pp. 3852.Google Scholar
Shachar, A., The Birthright Lottery. Citizenship and Global Inequality (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2009).Google Scholar
Sharpston, E., ‘Transparency and Clear Legal Language in the EU’ (2009–2010) 12 Cambridge Yearbook of European Legal Studies, 409424.Google Scholar
Shaw, M., International Law (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003).Google Scholar
Shultz, A., ‘The Stranger: An Essay in Social Psychology’ (1944) 49(6) American Journal of Sociology, 499507.Google Scholar
Siebold, A., ZwischenGrenzen. Die Geschichte des Schengen-Raums aus deutschen, französischen und polnischen Perspektiven (Paderborn: Ferdinand Schöningh, 2013).Google Scholar
Sofia Globe, ‘Process of Bulgaria’s New Ordinance on the Integration of Refugees Will Be a Long One’ (5 April 2017) Sofia Globe.Google Scholar
Sofia Globe, ‘UNHCR Welcomes Bulgaria’s New Ordinance on Refugee Integration, but Points to Gaps’ (24 July 2017) Sofia Globe.Google Scholar
Solanke, I., Discrimination as Stigma. A Theory of Anti-discrimination Law (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2017).Google Scholar
Soltész, B., ‘Migration Trends and Their Socio-Economic Context in Hungary’, in Kucharczyk, J. and Mesežnikov, G. (eds.), Phantom Menace: The Politics and Policies of Migration in Central Europe (Bratislava: Institute for Public Affairs and Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung, 2018), pp. 204224.Google Scholar
Somek, A., Engineering Equality. An Essay on European Anti-Discrimination Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011).Google Scholar
Somek, A., The Cosmopolitan Constitution (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Song, S., ‘Three Models of Civic Solidarity’, in Smith, R. M. (ed.), Citizenship, Borders, and Human Needs (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011), pp. 192207.Google Scholar
Soysal, Y. N., Limits of Citizenship – Migrants and Postnational Membership in Europe (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Spaventa, E., ‘Earned Citizenship – Understanding Union Citizenship through its Scope’, in Kochenov, D. (ed.), EU Citizenship and Federalism: The Role of Rights (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), pp. 204225.Google Scholar
Spijkerboer, T., ‘Analysing European Case Law on Migration. Options for Critical Lawyers’, in Azoulai, L. and de Vries, K. (eds.), EU Migration Law: Legal Complexities and Political Rationales (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014), pp. 188218.Google Scholar
Spijkerboer, T., ‘The Global Mobility Infrastructure: Reconceptualising the Externalisation of Migration Control’ (2018) 20(4) European Journal of Migration and Law, 452469.Google Scholar
Standing, G., The Precariat: The Dangerous New Class (London: Bloomsbury, 2011).Google Scholar
Stanley, J., Immigration and Citizenship Law (Dublin: Thomson Round Hall, 2018).Google Scholar
Staszak, J.-F., ‘Other/Otherness’, in Kitchin, R. and Thrift, N. (eds.), Encyclopedia of Human Geography (Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2009), pp. 4347.Google Scholar
Steimel, S. J., ‘Negotiating Refugee Empowerment(s) in Resettlement Organizations’ (2017) 15(1) Journal of Immigrant and Refugee Studies, 90107.Google Scholar
Stiglitz, J., Ocampo, J. A., Spiegel, S., Ffrench-Davis, R., and Nayyar, D., Stability with Growth: Macroeconomics, Liberalization and Development (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006).Google Scholar
Stone, D., Policy Paradox: The Art of Political Decision Making, 3rd ed. (New York: W. W. Norton & Co, 2012).Google Scholar
Strik, T., de Hart, B., and Niessen, E. Family Reunification: A Barrier or Facilitator of Integration? A Comparative Study (Brussels: European Commission DG Home, 2013).Google Scholar
Strik, T., Luiten, M., and van Oers, R., Country Report of the Netherlands (INTEC Project. Integration and naturalisation tests: The new way to European citizenship, Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen, 2010).Google Scholar
Strumia, F., ‘Citizenship and Free Movement’ (2006) 12(3) Columbia Journal of European Law, 741746.Google Scholar
Strumia, F., ‘European Citizenship and EU Immigration’ (2016) 22(4) European Law Journal, 417447.Google Scholar
Strumia, F., ‘Individual Rights, Interstate Equality, State Autonomy: European Horizontal Citizenship and its (Lonely) Playground from a Trans-Atlantic Perspective’, in Kochenov, D. (ed.), EU Citizenship and Federalism: The Role of Rights (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), pp. 615641.Google Scholar
Stumpf, J., ‘The Crimmigration Crisis: Immigrants, Crime and Sovereign Power’ (2006) 56(2) American University Law Review, 367419.Google Scholar
Szczepanikova, A. and Van Crieking, T., The Future of Migration in the European Union – Future Scenarios and Tools to Stimulate Forwar-Looking Discussions, EUR 29060 EN (Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union, 2018).Google Scholar
Täubig, V., Totale Institution Asyl: empirische Befunde zu alltäglichen Lebensführungen in der organisierten Desintegration (Weinheim: Juventa, 2009).Google Scholar
Taylor, C., ‘The Politics of Recognition (de politiek van erkenning)’, in Gutmann, A. (ed.), Multiculturalisme (Amsterdam: Boom, 1994), pp. 2573.Google Scholar
Tezcan-Idriz, N., ‘Dutch Courts Safeguarding Rights under the EEC–Turkey Association Law’ (2011) 13(2) European Journal of Migration and Law, 219239.Google Scholar
Tezcan-Idriz, N., ‘Family Reunification under the Standstill Clauses of EU–Turkey Association Law: Genc’ (2017) 54(1) Common Market Law Review, 263280.Google Scholar
Thapar-Björkert, S. and Borevi, K., ‘Gender and the “Integrationist Turn” – Comparative Perspectives on Marriage Migration in the UK and Sweden’ (2014) 17(2) Tijdschrift voor Genderstudies, 149165.Google Scholar
Thielemann, E. and Zaun, N., ‘Escaping Populism – Safeguarding Minority Rights’ (2018) 56(4) Journal of Common Market Studies, 906922.Google Scholar
Thornquist, A., ‘False Self-employment and Other Precarious Forms of Employment in the “Grey Area” of the Labour Market’ (2015) 31(4) International Journal of Comparative Labour Law and Industrial Relations, 411429.Google Scholar
Thornquist, A., ‘Welfare States and the Need for Social Protection of Self-Employed Migrant Workers in the European Union’ (2015) 34(4) International Journal of Comparative Labour Law and Industrial Relations, 391410.Google Scholar
Thränhardt, D. and Bommes, M. (eds.), National Paradigms of Migration Research (Osnabrück: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht Unipress, 2010).Google Scholar
Thym, D., ‘EU Migration Policy and its Constitutional Rationale. A Cosmopolitan Outlook’ (2013) 50(3) Common Market Law Review, 709736.Google Scholar
Thym, D., ‘The Elusive Limits of Solidarity: Residence Rights of and Social Benefits for Economically Inactive Union Citizens’ (2015) 52(1) Common Market Law Review, 1750.Google Scholar
Thym, D., ‘When Union Citizens Turn into Illegal Migrants: The Dano Case’ (2015) 40(2) European Law Review, 249262.Google Scholar
Thym, D., ‘“Citizens” and “Foreigners” in EU Law. Migration Law and its Cosmopolitan Outlook’ (2016) 22(3) European Law Journal, 296316.Google Scholar
Thym, D., ‘Towards a Contextual Conception of Social Integration in EU Immigration Law. Comments on P&S and K&A’ (2016) 18(1) European Journal of Migration and Law, 89111.Google Scholar
Thym, D., ‘Introduction. The Judicial Deconstruction of Union Citizenship’, in Thym, D. (ed.), Questioning EU Citizenship (Oxford: Bloomsbury, 2017), pp. 114.Google Scholar
Thym, D., ‘Migrationsfolgenrecht’ (2017) 76 Veröffentlichungen der Vereinigung der Deutschen Staatsrechtslehrer, 169176.Google Scholar
Thym, D., ‘The Evolution of Citizens’ Rights in Light of the EU’s Constitutional Development’, in Thym, D. (ed.), Questioning EU Citizenship (Oxford: Bloomsbury, 2017), pp. 111134.Google Scholar
Thym, D., Der Rechtsbruch-Mythos und wie man ihn widerlegt (Verfassungsblog, 2 May 2018).Google Scholar
Thym, D., ‘A Bird’s Eye View on ECJ Judgments on Immigration, Asylum and Border Control Cases’ (2019) 21(2) European Journal of Migration and Law, 166193.Google Scholar
Thym, D., ‘Between “Administrative Mindset” and “Constitutional Imagination”. The Role of the Court of Justice in Immigration, Asylum and Border Control Policy’ (2019) 44(1) European Law Review, 138158.Google Scholar
Thym, D., ‘Ungleichheit als Markenzeichen des Migrationsrechts’ (2019) 74(4) Zeitschrift für Öffentliches Recht, 905928.Google Scholar
Thym, D. and Tsourdi, L., ‘Searching for Solidarity in the EU Asylum and Border Policies’ (2017) 24(5) Maastricht Journal of European and Comparative Law, 605612.Google Scholar
Timmer, A., ‘Toward an Anti-Stereotyping Approach for the European Court of Human Rights’ (2011) 11(4) Human Rights Law Review, 707738.Google Scholar
Tobler, C., ‘Free Movement of Persons in the EU v. in the EEA: Of Effect-Related Homogeneity and a Reversed Polydor Principle’ (2018) 3(3) European Papers, 14291451.Google Scholar
Tobler, C. and Beglinger, J., Grundzüge des bilateralen (Wirtschafts-)Rechts Schweiz – EU. Systematische Darstellung in Text und Tafeln, 2 vols. (Zürich: Dike, 2013).Google Scholar
Todres, J., ‘Law, Otherness, and Human Trafficking (2009) 49(3) Santa Clara Law Review, 605672.Google Scholar
Transit Migration Forschungsgruppe (ed.), Turbulente Ränder: neue Perspektiven auf Migration an den Grenzen Europas, 2., unveränd. Aufl ed. (Bielefeld: Transcript-Verl, 2007).Google Scholar
Trauner, F., ‘Asylum Policy: The EU’s “Crises” and the Looming Policy Regime Failure’ (2016) 38(3) Journal of European Integration, 311325.Google Scholar
Triandafyllidou, A., ‘National Identity and the “other”’ (1998) 21(4) Ethnic and Racial Studies, 593612.Google Scholar
Tsianos, V. and Karakayali, S., ‘Transnational Migration and the Emergence of the European Border Regime: An Ethnographic Analysis’ (2010) 13(3) European Journal of Social Theory, 373387.Google Scholar
Tsourdi, E. (Lilian), ‘EU Reception Conditions: A Dignified Standard of Living for Asylum Seekers?’, in Chetail, V., De Bruycker, P., and Maiani, F. (eds.), Reforming the Common European Asylum System (Boston: Brill, 2016), pp. 269316.Google Scholar
Tucker, D., Precarious Non-standard Employment: A Review of the Literature (Wellington: Labour Market Policy Group, 2003).Google Scholar
Turner, B. S., ‘We Are All Denizens Now. On the Erosion of Citizenship’ (2016) 20(6–7) Citizenship Studies, 679692.Google Scholar
Turner, L., ‘Who Will Resettle Single Syrian Men?’ (2017) 54(1) Forced Migration Review, 2931.Google Scholar
Turner, S., ‘What Is a Refugee Camp? Explorations of the Limits and Effects of the Camp’ (2016) 29(2) Journal of Refugee Studies, 139148.Google Scholar
Tyler, I., ‘The Hieroglyphics of the Border: Racial Sstigma in Neoliberal Europe’ (2018) 41(10) Ethnic and Racial Studies, 17831801.Google Scholar
Tyler, P. and Cooke, C., Resettling Refugees – Support after the First Year: A Guide for Local Authorities (York: Migration Yorkshire and the Regional Strategic Migration Partnership for the Yorkshire and Humber region, 2017).Google Scholar
Valentová, E., ‘Selected Aspects of Migrant Integration in the Czech Republic’, in Kucharczyk, J. and Mesežnikov, G. (eds.), Phantom Menace: The Politics and Policies of Migration in Central Europe (Bratislava: Institute for Public Affairs and Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung, 2018), pp. 105125.Google Scholar
Valk, H. de, ‘Pathways Into Adulthood. A Comparative Study on Family Life Transitions Among Migrant and Dutch Youth’, PhD Thesis, Utrecht University (2006).Google Scholar
Van den Bogaert, S., Jesse, M., Van Rompuy, B., Borger, V., and Aalbers, M., ‘Kroniek van het Europees materieel recht’ (2018) (35) Nederlands Juristenblad, 2654–2669.Google Scholar
Van Gestel, R. and Micklitz, H.-W., ‘Why Methods Matter in European Legal Scholarship’ (2014) 20(3) European Law Journal, 292316.Google Scholar
Van Gyes, G. and Szekér, L., Impact of the Crisis on Working Conditions in Europe (Leuven: EurWORK, HIVA-KU Leuven, 2013).Google Scholar
Van Meeteren, M., Engbersen Weitaus, G., and van San, M., ‘Striving for a Better Position. Aspirations and the Role of Cultural, Economic, and Social Capital for Irregular Migrants in Belgium’ (2009) 43(4) International Migration Review, 881907.Google Scholar
Van Oers, R., Erbsoll, E., and Kostakopoulou, D., A Redefinition of Belonging? Language and Integration Tests in Europe (Leiden: Martinus Nijhoff, 2010).Google Scholar
Van Praag, C., Marokkanen in Nederland: een profiel (The Hague: NIDI, 2006).Google Scholar
Van Walsum, S., The Family and the Nation: Dutch Family Migration Policies in the Context of Changing Family Norms (Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2008).Google Scholar
Vasilev, G., ‘Open Borders and the Survival of National Cultures’, in Weber, L. (ed.), Rethinking Border Control for a Globalizing World (New York: Routledge, 2014), pp. 98115.Google Scholar
Vedsted-Hansen, J., ‘Reception Conditions as Human Rights: Pan-European Standard or Systemic Deficiencies?’, in Chetail, V., De Bruycker, P., and Maiani, F. (eds.), Reforming the Common European Asylum System (Boston: Brill, 2016), pp. 317352.Google Scholar
Vega, I., ‘Empathy, Morality, and Criminality: The Legitimation Narratives of U.S. Border Patrol Agents’ (2018) 44(15) Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 25442561.Google Scholar
Verbist, V., Reverse Discrimination in the European Union (Antwerp: Intersentia, 2017).Google Scholar
Verkuyten, M., ‘Ethnic Discrimination and Minority Identity: A Social Psychological Perspective’, in Bonjour, S., Rea, A., and Jacobs, D. (eds.), The Others in Europe (Brussels: Editions de l’Université Bruxelles, 2011), pp. 127136.Google Scholar
Verschueren, H., ‘Preventing “Benefit Tourism” in the EU: A Narrow or Broad Interpretation of the Possibilities Offered by the ECJ in Dano?’ (2015) 52(2) Common Market Law Review, 363390.Google Scholar
Verschueren, H., ‘Employment and Social Security Rights of Third-Country Labour Migrants under EU Law. An Incomplete Patchwork of Legal Protection’ (2016) 18(2) European Journal of Migration and Law, 373408.Google Scholar
Vertovec, S., The Emergence of Super-Diversity in Britain (Working Paper No. 25, Oxford: Centre on Migration, Policy, and Society, Oxford University, 2006).Google Scholar
Vicol, D. and William, A., Bulgarians and Romanians in the British National Press: 1 December 2012–1 December 2013 (Migration Observatory report, Oxford, COMPAS, University of Oxford, 2014).Google Scholar
Vincent, A., Nationalism and Particularity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002).Google Scholar
von Bogdandy, A., ‘Founding Principles of EU Law. A Theoretical and Doctrinal Sketch’ (2010) 16(1) European Law Journal, 95111.Google Scholar
Wæver, O., ‘Securitization and Desecuritization’, in Lipschutz, R. (ed.), On Security (New York: Columbia University Press, 1995), pp. 4686.Google Scholar
Wæver, O., Buzan, B., Kelstrup, M., and Lemaitre, P., Identity, Migration and the New Security Agenda in Europe (London: Pinter, 1993).Google Scholar
Waldron, J., ‘What Respect Is Owed to Illusions about Immigration and Culture?’ NYU School of Law, Public Law Research Paper (2016) No. 16–49.Google Scholar
Walker, N., ‘Legal Theory and the European Union: A 25th Anniversary Essay’ (2005) 25(4) Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, 581601.Google Scholar
Wallace Goodman, S., ‘Controlling Immigrants through Language and Country Knowledge Requirements’ (2011) 34(2) West European Politics, 235255.Google Scholar
Walter, A., Reverse Discrimination and Family Reunification (Nijmegen: WLP, 2008).Google Scholar
Walzer, M., Spheres of Justice. A Defense of Pluralism and Equality (New York: Basic Books, 1983).Google Scholar
Weil, P. and Handler, N., ‘Revocation of Citizenship and Rule of Law: How Judicial Review Defeated Britain’s First Denaturalization Regime’ (2018) 36(2) Law and History Review, 295354.Google Scholar
Weiler, J. H. H., ‘Thou Shalt Not Oppress a Stranger: On the Judicial Protection of the Human Rights of Non-EC Nationals – A Critique’ (1992) 3(1) European Journal of International law, 6591.Google Scholar
Weiler, J. H. H., ‘To Be a European Citizen. Eros and Civilization’, in Weiler, J. H. H. (ed.), The Constitution of Europe (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999), pp. 324357.Google Scholar
Weiler, J. H. H., ‘In Defence of the Status Quo: Europe’s Constitutional Sonderweg’, in Weiler, J. H. H. and Wind, M. (eds.), Euopean Constitutionalism beyond the State (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), pp. 724.Google Scholar
Weiler, J. H. H., ‘Deciphering the Political and Legal DNA of European Integration. An Exploratory Essay’, in Dickson, J., and Eleftheriadis, P. (eds.), Philosophical Foundations of European Union Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), pp. 137158.Google Scholar
Weiler, J. H. H., Haltern, U., and Mayer, F. C., ‘European Democracy and its Critique: Polity and System’ (1995) 18(1) Western European Politics, 439.Google Scholar
Weinmann, M., Becher, I., and von Gostomski, C. B., ‘Einbürgerungen in Deutschland’ (2013) (10) Zeitschrift für Ausländerrecht, 373–378.Google Scholar
White, A., ‘Geographies of Asylum, Legal Knowledge and Legal Practices’ (2002) 21(8) Political Geography, 10551073.Google Scholar
Whyte, G., ‘Some Reflections on the Role of Religion in the Constitutional Order’, in Murphy, T. and Twomey, P. (eds.), Ireland’s Evolving Constitution: 1937–1997 (Oxford: Hart, 1999), pp. 5170.Google Scholar
Wiesbrock, A., ‘Granting Citizenship-Related Rights to Third-Country Nationals’ (2012) 14(1) European Journal of Migration and Law, 6394.Google Scholar
Will, A.-K., ‘The German Statistical Category “Migration Background”. Historical Roots, Revisions and Shortcomings’ (2019) 19(3) Ethnicities, 535557.Google Scholar
Wimmer, A., Ethnic Boundary Making. Institutions, Power, Networks (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014).Google Scholar
Wimmer, A. and Glick Schiller, N., ‘Methodological Nationalism, the Social Sciences, and the Study of Migration. An Essay in Historical Epistemology’ (2003) 37(3) International Migration Review, 576610.Google Scholar
Wright, S., ‘Welfare-to-Work, Agency and Personal Responsibility’ (2012) 41(2) Journal Social Policy, 309328.Google Scholar
Woude, M. A. H. van der, ‘Border Policing in Europe and Beyond: Legal and International Issues’, in den Boer, M. (red.), Comparative Policing from a Legal Perspective. Research Handbooks in Comparative Law (Cheltenham: Edgar Elgar Publishing, 2018), pp. 255271.Google Scholar
Woude, M. A. H. van der and Leun, J. P. van der, ‘Crimmigration Checks in the Internal Border Areas of the EU: Finding the Discretion that Matters’ (2017) 14(1) European Journal of Criminology, 2745.Google Scholar
Xanthaki, A., ‘Multiculturalism and International Law: Discussing Universal Standards’ (2010) 32(1) Human Rights Quarterly, 2148.Google Scholar
Xanthaki, A., ‘Against Integration, for Human Rights’ (2016) 20(6) The International Journal of Human Rights, 815838.Google Scholar
Yanow, D., Constructing ‘Race’ and ‘Ethnicity’ in America (New York: M. E. Sharpe, 2015).Google Scholar
Yanow, D. and van der Haar, M., ‘People out of Place: Allochthony and Autochthony in the Netherlands’ Identity Discourse – Metaphors and Categories in Action’ (2013) 16(2) Journal of International Relations and Development, 227261.Google Scholar
Yilmaz, F., ‘Right-Wing Hegemony and Immigration: How the Populist Far-Right Achieved Hegemony through the Immigration Debate in Europe’ (2012) 60(3) Current Sociology, 368381.Google Scholar
Zaccaria, P., ‘(Trans)MediterrAtlantic Embodied Archives’ (2015) 8(1) Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies Journal, 118.Google Scholar
Zedner, L., ‘Citizenship Deprivation, Security and Human Rights’ (2016) 18(2) European Journal of Migration and Law, 222242.Google Scholar
Žižek, S., Welcome to the Desert of the Real: Five Essays on September 11 and Related Dates (London: Verso, 2002).Google Scholar
Zolberg, A. R., A Nation by Design. Immigration Policy in the Fashioning of America (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006)Google Scholar

Secondary Sources

BBC News, ‘Serious Flaws in UK Immigration System, Law Society Warns’, BBC News Website, 12 April 2018.Google Scholar
BTA, ‘Government Revokes Refugee Integration Ordinance’, BTA, 31 March 2017.Google Scholar
Dolejší, V. and Kubík, J., ‘Sobotka: Zeman šíří nenávist’, Hospodářské noviny, 20 November 2015.Google Scholar
Elgot, J., ‘Rejection of EU Citizens Seeking UK Residency Hits 28%’, Guardian Online, 27 February 2017.Google Scholar
The Guardian, ‘Black Pete Exposes the Netherlands’ Problem with Race’, The Guardian, 5 December 2012.Google Scholar
The Guardian, ‘Refugees Will Have the Right to Work – Why Not Employ Them?’, The Guardian, 11 September 2015.Google Scholar
The Guardian, ‘Dutch Woman with Two British Children Told to Leave the UK after 24 years’, The Guardian, 28 December 2016.Google Scholar
The Guardian, ‘Fear of Brexit Brain Drain as EU Nationals Leave British Universities’, The Guardian, 3 June 2017.Google Scholar
The Guardian, ‘96% Drop in EU Nurses Registering to Work in Britain since Brexit Vote’, The Guardian, 12 June 2017.Google Scholar
The Guardian, ‘Far-Right Italy Minister Vows “Action” to Expel Thousands of Roma’, The Guardian, 19 June 2018.Google Scholar
The Guardian, ‘Revealed: Big Rise in Public Racism since Brexit Vote’, The Guardian, 21 May 2019.Google Scholar
Hastings, M., ‘Our Rudeness to European Allies Is Shameful’, The Times, 31 October 2018.Google Scholar
Juncker, J.-C., ‘State of the Union Address 2016: Towards a better Europe’, 14 September 2016.Google Scholar
Macron, E., ‘Initiative pour l’Europe’, Speech at the Sorbonne, 26 September 2017.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Moritz Jesse, Universiteit Leiden
  • Book: European Societies, Migration, and the Law
  • Online publication: 13 November 2020
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108767637.020
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Moritz Jesse, Universiteit Leiden
  • Book: European Societies, Migration, and the Law
  • Online publication: 13 November 2020
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108767637.020
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Edited by Moritz Jesse, Universiteit Leiden
  • Book: European Societies, Migration, and the Law
  • Online publication: 13 November 2020
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108767637.020
Available formats
×