Book contents
- EU Citizenship and Federalism
- EU Citizenship and Federalism
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Foreword: European Citizenship as Federal Citizenship: Studying EU Citizenship through the Federal Lens
- Table of Cases
- Table of TEU, TFEU and CFR Provisions
- Table of the Provisions of Regulations 1612/68 and 492/2011 and Directive 2004/38
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Citizenship within the EU Federal Context
- Part II EU Citizenship Rights and the Vertical Division of Powers in the EU
- 10 The Political Side of EU Citizenship in the Context of EU Federalism
- 11 Reframing Public Health Governance: From Risk to Citizenship and Participation
- 12 The Federal Implications of the Transformation of the Market Freedoms into Sources of Fundamental Rights for the Union Citizen
- 13 Perspectives on Social Citizenship in the EU: From Status Positivus to Status Socialis Activus via Two Forms of Transnational Solidarity
- 14 A Citizenship Right to Stay? The Right Not to Move in a Union Based on Free Movement
- 15 ‘Scelestus Europeus Sum’: What Protection against Expulsion Does EU Citizenship Offer to European Offenders?
- 16 EU Sexual Citizenship: Sex Beyond the Internal Market
- 17 EU Citizenship and the European Federal Challenge through the Prism of Family Reunification
- 18 The Right to Stay at Home: A Basis for Expanding European Family Rights
- 19 EU Citizenship and the Right to Care
- 20 Union Citizenship and Disability: Restricted Access to Equality Rights and the Attitudinal Model of Disability
- 21 Data Privacy Rights and Citizenship: Notes on Federalism All the Way Up
- 22 The Federal Entrenchment of Citizens in the European Union Member States’ Criminal Laws: Or How EU Citizenship Is Shaping Criminal Law
- 23 The Right of EU Citizens to Diplomatic and Consular Protection: A Step Towards Recognition of EU Citizenship in Third Countries?
- Part III Broader Implications and Limitations
- Index
10 - The Political Side of EU Citizenship in the Context of EU Federalism
from Part II - EU Citizenship Rights and the Vertical Division of Powers in the EU
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 April 2017
- EU Citizenship and Federalism
- EU Citizenship and Federalism
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Foreword: European Citizenship as Federal Citizenship: Studying EU Citizenship through the Federal Lens
- Table of Cases
- Table of TEU, TFEU and CFR Provisions
- Table of the Provisions of Regulations 1612/68 and 492/2011 and Directive 2004/38
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Citizenship within the EU Federal Context
- Part II EU Citizenship Rights and the Vertical Division of Powers in the EU
- 10 The Political Side of EU Citizenship in the Context of EU Federalism
- 11 Reframing Public Health Governance: From Risk to Citizenship and Participation
- 12 The Federal Implications of the Transformation of the Market Freedoms into Sources of Fundamental Rights for the Union Citizen
- 13 Perspectives on Social Citizenship in the EU: From Status Positivus to Status Socialis Activus via Two Forms of Transnational Solidarity
- 14 A Citizenship Right to Stay? The Right Not to Move in a Union Based on Free Movement
- 15 ‘Scelestus Europeus Sum’: What Protection against Expulsion Does EU Citizenship Offer to European Offenders?
- 16 EU Sexual Citizenship: Sex Beyond the Internal Market
- 17 EU Citizenship and the European Federal Challenge through the Prism of Family Reunification
- 18 The Right to Stay at Home: A Basis for Expanding European Family Rights
- 19 EU Citizenship and the Right to Care
- 20 Union Citizenship and Disability: Restricted Access to Equality Rights and the Attitudinal Model of Disability
- 21 Data Privacy Rights and Citizenship: Notes on Federalism All the Way Up
- 22 The Federal Entrenchment of Citizens in the European Union Member States’ Criminal Laws: Or How EU Citizenship Is Shaping Criminal Law
- 23 The Right of EU Citizens to Diplomatic and Consular Protection: A Step Towards Recognition of EU Citizenship in Third Countries?
- Part III Broader Implications and Limitations
- Index
Summary
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- EU Citizenship and FederalismThe Role of Rights, pp. 271 - 293Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2017
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