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‘Residence’
as the new additional inclusive criterion for citizenship
Hélene Oger
PhD candidate (EUI), LLM in Comparative Law (Sorbonne), Licence (Sorbonne).
Address: European University Institute, Badia Fiesolana, Via dei Roccettini
9, I-50016, San Domenico di Fiesole, (FI) ITALY
E-mail: [email protected]
Copyright © 2003 Hélene Oger
First Published in Web Journal of Current Legal Issues.
Summary:
The situation of third-country national long-term residents in the European
Member States today highlights an ill-functioning system in relation to
citizenship. If these privileged immigrants do enjoy ever more rights, this is
only through the vehicle of immigration law, derogatory law. They do not enjoy
an equal legal status but only have, to some extent, equivalent rights, which
annihilates the concept of citizenship understood as both passive (rights and
obligations) and active (political and social participation). And more
generally, the global evolution points towards an always more mobile and
heterogeneous population.
The concept of European citizenship questions
to some extent the traditional model of national-citizenship, since it is no
longer directly linked to a state or nationality. However, it was only partial.
There is consequently a need to revise the concept of citizenship for the sake
of equality and diversity. Citizenship should additionally be acquired through
the criterion of ‘habitual residence’ (after 5 years) as an
objective criterion in order to secure an equal legal status for the whole
stable population and to secure a full concept of citizenship.
Contents
Introduction:
The concept of citizenship is vague and complex. Classically, beyond the
psychological aspect of citizenship (sense of belonging), one distinguishes
between two dimensions of citizenship: active and passive citizenship. The
former describes participation in a social and a political community, otherwise
called the political, the formal and the ‘living-together’ citizenship.
Passive citizenship, on the other hand, determines citizens’ rights
and duties toward the state. It is also called legal, substantial (see Sorensen
1996) or ‘social-contract’ citizenship.
Citizenship is both an individual relationship between each citizen
and his state and an exclusionary concept, since one is or one is not
a citizen according to the state’s sovereign decision. This draws boundaries,
historically identified with the nation’s boundaries. Traditionally,
Germany is represented as embedding cultural (ethnic) citizenship, in contrast
to the French political (civic) citizenship model, whereas the multicultural
British model recognises diversity. However different these three basic European
models are, nationality has unanimously been recognised as the necessary pre-requisite
for the qualification of citizen (see Hollinger 1995,p.131). Hollinger distinguishes
between civic and ethnic nationalisms.. National citizenship emerged as a
‘pivotal element’ of the social contract fostered by the Westphalian
system of states, the citizen being the national and the rights of man being
national rights.
Yet, this traditional understanding of citizenship, based on nationality and
cultural homogeneity, was challenged by post-World War II immigration. Indeed,
this rapidly became not temporary but permanent immigration (the myth of ‘Gastarbeiter’).
And although most European countries stopped the recruitment of labour in
the mid-70s, immigration went on through family reunification and asylum.
As a result, a new category of inhabitants was created, namely the ‘denizens’,
or, in the EU terminology(1), 'third-country
nationals long-term residents‘. These permanent residents are denied
the status of citizen and as such excluded from political participation, although
they enjoy some rights through the doctrine of ‘world (or cosmopolitan)
citizenship’(2). Juridically
excluded, as foreigners, but physically present on the territory, their ‘in-betweenness’,
or fluid position, consequently not only conflicts with the traditional conception,
but even questions this dominant framework and calls for a revision of citizenship,
no longer exclusively based on nationality.
European citizenship did not modify the situation, since, although citizenship
is here decoupled from nationality, it is only partial, because the condition
to belong to European citizenry is to be a national of one member state. As
such, its revolutionary aspect was only limited and did not have any more
inclusive consequences, denizens being still excluded.
In the first part, this article will study the partial integration of denizens
both at the state and at the European levels. It is aimed at showing that
the two-fold result, namely the maintenance of the citizen/non-citizen distinction
whilst diluting it in relation to the rights conferred, may only lead to a
non-inclusive passive citizenship. In the second part, this article will thus
develop a new basis for citizenship, the criterion of residence, in order
to ensure both solidarity and mutual recognition of difference on an equal
footing within an open, heterogeneous but inclusive context.
This article therefore argues that the only possible way to have both passive
and active aspects of citizenship within an inclusive concept is to create
a new legal way of becoming citizen through the criterion of residence.
Top | Contents | Bibliography
I-
Denizens’ Paradigm: Bearer of Rights but Juridically Excluded
A-
The situation at the member-states’ level
1- A Weakened
State
The nation-state remains undoubtedly the main referent for people’s
identity. However, as we have entered a global era with the development of
trans- and post-national dimensions, and so a fractured world at the infra-state
level, the state has been weakened, and people became more diverse, with
multiple belongings. Their complicated and fractured self faces a monochrome
national-citizenship. There is consequently a paradox between the complex
reality and the monocular homogeneous statal construction. Nevertheless, there
has been an attempt to seriously tackle the problem, notably with the extension
of human rights as opposed to citizen/national rights. Indeed, a
significant number of rights are based on the territoriality principle rather
than on the nationality principle, and as such open to all inhabitants,
regardless of their nationality.
2- Denizens’ Enjoyment
of Most Constitutional Rights
Constitutional law and constitutional courts have played a key role in
the development of denizens’ rights (see Joppke 2001, p.36).
As a result, most of the fundamental rights protect all inhabitants, regardless
of their nationality.
In the UK there is no formal differentiation
between nationals and non-nationals, since there is no written constitution, no
rights catalogue and since “
every person within the jurisdiction
enjoys the
equal protection of [the] laws”,
Reg.v
. Home
Office, ex parte Khawaja [1984]. However, the grounds for deportation in the
1971 Immigration Act did seriously limit this principle. And, within that
framework, the Human Rights Act (HRA) although providing for the first
time
(3) a written charter, did not
fundamentally change the situation. In Germany, the rights contained in articles
8, 9, 11 and 12 of the Fundamental Law are limited to German nationals. If, on
the one hand, the Constitutional Court has confirmed the restriction of freedoms
of occupation and profession (BverfGE 59,294) and of movement to nationals
(articles 11 and 12), freedoms of assembly and association (articles 8 and 9)
have, on the other hand, been opened to foreigners by statutory law. In France,
rights are open to every individual in the preamble of the 1946 Constitution,
whereas some are reserved to citizens in the 1789 Declaration of the Rights of
Man and Citizen. Additionally, in 1993 (“Maîtrise de
l’immigration, 13/08/1993,no 93-325 DC), the ‘Conseil
Constitutionnel’ established that fundamental rights and freedoms of
constitutional value of all residents of the Republic must be recognised, as
long as their enjoyment is compatible with public order.
a- Civil Rights
In general, civil rights are based on the territoriality principle rather
than the personality principle, and are thus enjoyed by all inhabitants.
However, rights related to political expression and organisation were only
recently granted to immigrants. Additionally, foreigners in Germany do not have
the right to create political parties. The authorities may even limit or forbid
their political activity.Moreover, some civil rights, based on the fundamental
citizen/foreigner distinction, namely the principle of legal equality and the
permanent right to remain and right to return, are still forbidden or only to a
limited extent open to foreigners. Thus, article 2 of the French constitution,
stating that France is an indivisible, secular, democratic and social republic,
limits equality before the law to
citizens. However, foreigners can
invoke equality in certain areas (1993 decision).
The right to
permanently remain and the right to return have nonetheless been partially
extended to foreigners legally resident, for example through permanent residence
permits or through a right to return for second-generation immigrants. Article 8
ECHR also recognises a conditional right to family reunion and a certain
protection from expulsion. However, denizens are always susceptible to expulsion
for public security reasons, if they do not behave as ‘good
citizens’. This impedes their integration (see Holtschneider, p.63), and
reinforces their position as an excluded class of residents, as
‘outsiders-inhabitants’. The Assembly of the Council of Europe thus
invited governments to apply ordinary-law penalties rather than expulsion for
long-term immigrants (Report of the Committee on Migration, Refugees and
Democracy 2001). In the Netherlands as in Portugal, some long-term immigrants
enjoy an absolute protection against expulsion.
Regarding economic
rights, the access to self-employed professional status is less restricted
(except in Germany) than access to employee status. However, there is still a
general discriminatory access to civil servants
functions
(4).
b- Political
Rights
Political rights remain largely the exclusive privilege of citizens.
However, in Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Finland, Netherlands, Ireland, denizens
have been granted a right to vote and stand for local elections, as recommended
by the Convention on the Participation of Foreigners on the Democratic Public
Life of the Council of Europe or the Commission of the EU.
In contrast,
both the German and French Constitutional Courts stated that such an extension
would breach the constitution, on the ground that only nationals - as the
sovereign people - can be the bearer of political rights. The
‘Bundesverfassungsgericht’ argued that the constitution entitled
Germans citizens alone, the ‘Staatsvolk’, to vote (BverfGE 83,37).
However, since the Maastricht Treaty, EU citizens have been granted a right to
stand and vote for local elections (article 28(2) GG).In France, the
‘Marceau Long’ report for the reform of the French code of
nationality proposed to adopt the criterion of residence instead of nationality
for voting in local elections, because it was a vote marking participation in
local life. However, in the first Maastricht decision, the ‘Conseil
Constitutionnel’ held that giving a right to vote in local elections to
EU citizens breached the constitution, since the local representatives of the
state elected the members of the Sénat, a national Assembly. In
order to conform with European law, article 88-3 was therefore added to the
Constitution.
There is thus a “three-layer’ system” in
France and Germany with full political rights for citizens, partial political
rights for EU citizens and no political rights for third-country nationals. The
position is different in Britain, since the basis of the three-layer system is
wider. Indeed, the right to vote and stand for general election is open to all
Commonwealth citizens (not only British) and to Irish citizens. As in Germany
and France, citizens of the EU can vote and stand as candidates in European or
local elections (RPA 2000, s.2) while non-Commonwealth citizens do not have any
political rights.
c- Social Rights
Social rights depend more on residence (territoriality principle) than on
nationality (personality principle). Universal social rights, such as health and
social security or public and free instruction, are generally open to
immigrants. A second category, linked to employment covering insurances
(illness, accident, old-age, unemployment), is also only partially
discriminatory. A third category of social benefits depends on incomes and
salaries.
In Great-Britain, the holders of work-related categories of
permits and the holders of Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR) may enjoy all
benefits.
In France, the 1946 Constitution’s preamble added social
and economic rights dealing with work, education and health. Equal access to
social benefits (1990 decision) is not absolute, a different treatment being not
necessarily discriminatory (1993 decision). However, denizens do enjoy equal
rights. Moreover, family benefits are open to all foreigners who legally entered
and have stayed for more than three months in France.
In Germany, foreigners in principle have equal rights if they legally reside
in Germany. Nevertheless, only denizens enjoy children benefits, apartments
subsidies and education holydays and education subsidies.
Top | Contents | Bibliography
3- Denizens’
‘In-Betweenness’
The rights granted to immigrants on the ambiguous ground of residence,
rather than creating “cosmopolitan denizenship” (see Zolberg 2000,
p.518) prove that the nation-state is conflicting with the very liberal notion
of human rights, supposedly universally and equally granted.
Whereas the
classical concept of citizenship obeys an "either-or" logic, denizenship has
blurred this boundary, evidencing an ill-functioning concept. Long-term
immigrants are no longer “humanly or sociologically foreigners”.
Their nationality, “though a
legal reality,
does not reflect
[t
heir] actual position in human terms” (ECtHR, Djeroud, 1990).
Denizens recreate and transform the traditional nation-state, since these
‘outsiders-inhabitants’, in principle subject to derogatory laws, in
fact live permanently in the country, transforming temporary derogation into the
rule, per se modifying the existent regime.
In the specific case of
expulsion, there have been some unsuccessful attempts at the international level
to legally recognise this factual situation. Some judges of the European Court
of Human Rights have argued against expulsion on the basis of ‘
de
facto’
(5) citizenship.
According to the minority opinion of judge De Meyer in the
Beldjoudi
(6) case, Beldjoudi’s
expulsion would be inhuman treatment, because France was in fact
‘his’ country. He bases his reasoning on article 12(4) ICCPR,
recognising the right of a person to enter ‘his’ own country.
Because it has been acknowledged
(7)
that the scope is larger than the nationality principle, some hoped that the
host country of a denizen could be recognised as ‘his’ own country.
However, such a wide interpretation has never been acknowledged by UN
jurisprudence, limiting it to very specific
cases
(8). In the same case, judge
Martens wondered
whether th[e] ban [on expulsion of nationals] should not apply equally to
aliens who were born and bred in a member state or who have otherwise, by virtue
of long-residence, become fully integrated there.
Rather than this internal inclusion, member states have chosen to cope with
the current difficulties from an
external perspective. It is dealt with
in terms of
immigration law, thus strongly stating that denizens are
only integrated as
outsiders,
Aus- and not
In-Länder.
Top | Contents | Bibliography
B-
The European Union: a not more generous beyond-state level
While citizenship is still firmly anchored in the nation-state, it is no
longer the whole story, as is acknowledged by the European quasi ( see
Zolberg 2000,p. 518) citizenship.
1- A not more inclusive
European quasi-citizenship
European citizenship, being independent of a (non-existent) European
nationality, must be an inclusive and “pure citizenship” (see
Magnette 1997, p.25). The dissociation between nationality and citizenship could
then include non-nationals, namely the denizens, and thus give them an equal
status, rather than only the "almost equivalent rights" enjoyed at the state
level. However, this was not in fact achieved since, according to article 17 of
the TEU, the pre-requisite for European citizenship is the possession of the
nationality of one member-state. Thus, as Kveinen (see Kveinen 2002,
p.21)
(9) asserts, the post-Westphalian
community within the EU ends up privileging citizenship as
status over
citizenship as
fact(10),
since ex-outsiders become insiders through European citizenship, without
including third-country nationals.
In other words, there was a move
beyond the traditional understanding of citizenship, but it was still too shy to
embrace denizens. European citizenship is “caught up in a national
framework which constrains its dynamic potential” (Bauboeck).
Significantly, the notion of dual citizenship in the European constitution was
withdrawn. What was supposed to be a revolution was ‘pie in the sky
’ (D’Oliveira). The referent remains the nation-state and
nationality is secured. Moreover, at the statal level, it created an
intermediate category of ‘others’ in between the states’
nationals and third-country nationals. Through the transformation of the
traditional citizens/non-citizens dichotomy - already altered by denizenship -
into a trichotomy between national citizens, other Union citizens and
third-country nationals - and even a quatri-chotomy with denizens added - the
position of the latter has worsened. Moreover, not only are denizens not
European citizens, but they also enjoy only limited rights at the EU
level.
2- The current and
prospective future rights of denizens
There has been a powerful obstacle to granting rights to foreigners at the
European level, since it was a large preserve of state sovereignty.
Consequently, the agreement for harmonisation will probably only be to a minimum
rule.
a- Very limited rights
for non-privileged non-EU Citizens
Nowadays, foreigners do have the right to
petition, the right to sue before the European Court of Justice, and denizens,
who live in a second member state, enjoy an equal status for social benefits,
since regulation 1408/71 has been extended in a regulation of May 2003 to
third-country nationals. However, the position of third-country nationals
regarding non-discrimination (see Raible 2001) (article 13 TEC) was never clear.
Because EU competence is limited, one can wonder if third-country nationals are
in fact covered, notwithstanding that in practice such formulas have been
limited to EU citizens and that the two anti-discrimination directives
2000/43/EC and 2000/78/EC do not cover differences of treatment based on
nationality. These rights are thus very limited. Nevertheless, there are some
interesting potential future developments, namely regarding the future status of
the European Charter and the future directive on the status of long-term
residents.
b- Future recognition of
rights, however limited by the member-states’ permanent
opposition
Although -the European Charter has been adopted by the member-states at
the Nice Summit as a mere declaration, the European Court of Justice can draw
inspiration from it and it has been incorporated as the second part (CONV
725/03, 27th May 2003: European Charter is the second part of the draft of the
European Constitution) of the draft EU constitution.
Most of the rights
recognised by the Charter are, on the member-state classical constitutional
model, open to every human being rather than limited to citizens. However, the
freedom of labour in another member-state is restricted, the right to vote and
stand for an election is limited to EU citizens and freedom of movement is
restricted but might be extended to all residents (article 45(2)). This should,
in the future, be an important source of rights and equality for
denizens.
A political agreement was reached by the heads of state and
government at the Tampere European Council for the equal treatment of
third-country nationals. This led to the Commission’s
proposal
(11): for a directive on the
status of third-country nationals long term
residents
(12), adopted by the
Commission and the Parliament, but importantly modified in the member-states'
political agreement of June 2003. It aims at approximating national legislation
and practice regarding the granting of ‘long-term resident status’
to third-country nationals legally resident according to the universalism
principle, and regarding their freedom of movement. According to article 12,
immigrants would enjoy a right to equal treatment in a wide range of economic
and social matters
(13), but not
political (although the European Parliament recommended the right to participate
in local elections
(14)).
Regarding freedom of movement, if the proposal of the Commission was largely
favourable, this is not the case of the political agreement reached by the member-states.
Indeed, the access to work may be limited in the second state, if the member-states
already have a quota system, and may also depend on the situation of the labour
market. Moreover, the member-states may limit access on the basis of ‘integration’
(which term is undefined). They may also limit social security. Finally, regarding
the new directive on family reunification, their right to family reunion may
also be reduced. In addition, the permit may be withdrawn, refused or not renewed
if they do not have sufficient financial resources. Thus, this directive will
grant an important set of rights for denizens approaching those that they already
enjoy in the member-states, but it will not be more favourable. Indeed, it lays
down only minimum rules, creating a harmonised legislative floor. Moreover,
although there are some "stand-still" clauses to limit the adoption of less
favourable domestic laws, nothing prevents member-states owering the standard
of their laws before the adoption of the directive. It is not a legislation
based on human rights but on the member-states’ interests and that might
be very prejudicial to denizens. Despite the generous proposals and speeches
(15)
at the European Union level for a more inclusive society, the laws to be enacted
will be very restrictive, since as at the state level, the first aim today is
to prevent immigration.
Top | Contents | Bibliography
II-
Residenceship: a necessary revision based on the objective criterion of
residence
If denizens have more rights than before, it is mostly based on their
status as permanent residents rather than on an equal status as citizens. To
base citizenship on residence would permit them to have the same rights
(including political participation and ban on deportation) and the equal status
of citizens. This is no reference to the Commission’s concept of
‘civic citizenship’ (2000 Communication COM [2000] 757), viewed as a
means to integrate and a first step towards the acquisition of nationality,
since ‘Residenceship’ will no longer be based on nationality for the
sake of equal difference.
A-
‘Residenceship’: Pledge for an Inclusive Open Dialogue at the
national and European levels.
In all states in the world, a foreigner has neither a right to enter nor a
right to remain. The conditions under which he can enter and remain depend on
the laws and the practice of the administration of the state, as long as they do
not contradict humanitarian or international rules. Thus, the situation of
immigrants differs from that of refugees, since whereas for the latter, there
are some moral and legal humanitarian obligations, for the former, the state
decision is sovereign, “government authority is at the zenith”
(Schuck). There is, additionally, an exclusive and discretionary power of the
state to choose its nationals.
(16)
In other words, there is in this sensitive area, a monologue, rather than a
state/individual dialogue. However, state discretion had increasingly to take
into account individuals’ rights - separated from any referent.
Arendt’s paradox of human rights, namely that human rights meant to be
universal but only in the sense that all legitimate governments ought to
guarantee them for their citizens, has been partially challenged.
Because
the permanent foreigner's status of denizenship is closer to that of nationals,
because there is a trend to limit discretionary power for naturalisation and
time of residence, because there is a broader acceptance of dual nationality,
and simply because of the increasing movement of persons, the classical
understanding of naturalisation as the last and definitive step toward a full
legal recognition must be
reconsidered
(17). Hammar’s
model of the three entry gates
(18),
illustrating a one-way movement, is outdated. Naturalisation should no longer.
It must be replaced by ‘citizenisation’5, a status decoupled from
nationality.
There is a need to revise the very understanding of
citizenship (see Agamben 2000) in order not to end up with forced solidarity.
‘Residenceship’ would better integrate immigrants, because they
would automatically, after a certain period of stay, become citizens, rather
than become ‘natural’. They would be no more fundamental
discrimination based on nationality, thus opening up the path toward a mutual
recognition respecting diversity, toward ‘differential equality’.
There would be no more fake tolerance and integration through naturalisation as
the marker of the down-grading of their culture for the sake of
loyalty
(19). Equality requires us
to develop a theory where ‘people’ equates to the population
residing within the borders, and which as such is adaptable to unavoidable,
permanent and ongoing changes.‘Residenceship’ must be
‘nomadic’, imperfect, contingent.
There had been, at the
European level, some interesting proposals (among
others
(20)) basing citizenship on
residence. Thus, an independent group of experts in criminal-, immigration and
asylum-law had proposed to revise article 17 to extend it to third country
nationals legally resident in a member-state for five years. They will enjoy all
EU citizens’ rights, except diplomatic protection. However, that would
only give a
similar status to foreigners in their name of foreigners.
They are only by extension rather than automatically EU citizens.
Member-states’ nationals would still be privileged. Nevertheless, it would
also create an independent and more inclusive European citizenship.
The
Migrants Forum, scholars such as Delanty and D’Oliveira, and the Economic
and Social Committee
(21), proposed
that European citizenship be automatically granted to all third-country
nationals legally residents in one member-state for five years or more. This
possibility was indeed discussed many times within the Convention. Denizens
would become ‘insiders’ rather than
‘outsiders-permanent-inhabitants’ on the basis of their residence
rather than by naturalisation. Yet, unless accompanied by a harmonisation of the
concept of ‘citizenisation’ within member states, this change would
be largely pointless. Indeed, European citizenship would not only be a statutory
denizenship at the European level, but the rules at member state level would not
change, since a definitive intermediary status would be created. As Weiler
argues, the European level should be an impulse for a new understanding at the
state level.
B-
The objective criterion of residence to secure an equal status of citizenship
rather than a lower status of permanent resident.
If the distinction between citizens and non-citizens is ever more
blurred, the member-states, like the European Union, still try to secure the
traditional understanding of citizenship, by creating an intermediary status, on
the basis of permanent permits for denizens. Member-states want to maintain
their forced monologue through immigration law whereas true integration may only
exist through citizenship based on residence as a neutral criterion.
1- Citizenship based on
residence contrasting naturalisation and ‘permanent’ residence
permits.
A more secure status through a permanent permit is more favourable to
immigrants and grant them a certain legitimacy in the host society. Yet, it
encloses denizens in an institutionally discriminatory position of outsiders.
Moreover, there is a tendency to increase the number of conditions necessary to
enjoy this status, in order to avoid a too large number of privileged denizens
and narrowing the differences with the conditions for
naturalisation.
a- Study of the
conditions for naturalisation and permanent status in the member-states and the
European Union
Habitual residence is never the sole criterion for permanent residence
status. Moreover, as the new condition of ‘integration’ illustrates,
member-states and the European Union tend nowadays to be stricter. As a result,
the conditions for permanent resident status are now closer to those for
naturalisation.
Thus, to acquire the EU long-term resident permit
(art.5), according to the proposed directive, the applicant must have resided,
legally and withour interruption. in the country for 5 years. He must also in
principle prove (art.6) that he has sufficient and stable resources and that he
has a sickness-insurance. Finally, a new condition has been added by the
Council
(22), namely that the
applicant must fulfil the ‘integration conditions, in accordance with
national law (art.5(2))’. This last condition is not defined and grants
full discretion to member-states, which is naturally dangerous for denizens. The
nature of the requirement will vary according to the host member-state and that
could also lead to a general lower degree of privilege for denizens in domestic
laws. Furthermore, the status may be refused for public security reasons. The
dangers are similar since, whereas the Commission strictly referred to the
directive 64/221/EC to define this term, the Council gives discretion to
member-states.
In Great Britain, to get Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR)
or settled status or permanent/full residency, an applicant must, in principle,
have been resident for 4 years. However, the applicant needs 14 years' residence
and 10 years of legal stay on any basis if he has been an illegal immigrant.
Moreover, the ngrant of ILR is conditional on the applicant having fulfilled the
conditions for the holding and prolongation of the first permit throughout the
previous 4-year period. The applicant must be able to provide for himself
financially without public funds.
Until 2002, there were no cultural and
language requirements. This new condition renders this permit closer to
naturalisation. An applicant for naturalisation must, in principle, havelegally
resided in the UK for five years and must have possessed ILR in the previous
year. He must also be of full age and not of unsound mind, have good character,
a sufficient knowledge of one of the four official languages; and since the
‘Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002’, he must have a
sufficient knowledge of life in the UK, and must intend to remain closely
connected with the UK. Both the conditions of ‘good character’ and
‘sufficient knowledge of life’ are undefined, thus giving wider
discretion to the authorities. The first concerns threat to public order and is
a classic condition. However, the requirement of ‘sufficient knowledge of
life’ is new and reflects the will of member-states to keep full
sovereignty, rather than to install a real dialogue between two actors, the
administration and the applicant. This is, moreover, unfavourable to denizens
with very different cultures and traditions.
However, what is interesting
in the UK is that the ILR is not as demanding and it could serve as a basis
regarding the conditions for ‘solidarity-residenceship’.
In
France, the applicant for a ‘carte de resident’ must have an
uninterrupted and legal stay of at least 3 years in France (but the new
Immigration Bill envisages 5 years in its article
10
(23), thus aligning French law
with the EU's proposed directive), sufficient financial resources and an
intention to settle permanently. Moreover, the Bill adds a new criterion, namely
that of integration of the foreigner in French
society
(24), which is probably
linked to the ‘contract of integration’ settled by the Government.
This is dangerous, because it is too vague, thus opening a path towards
arbitrariness. It also makes the residence permit closer to naturalisation,
since it was previously only required for the latter. The status may be refused
for public order and security reasons and if there is a deportation order in
force in respet of the applicant. Additionally, new article 13 suppresses the
automatic granting of semi-permanent status for foreigners who entered on the
grounds of family reunification, and new article14 suppresses the automatic
conversion of the temporary permit into a semi-permanent permit after 5 years of
uninterrupted presence in France, since it subjects it to a condition of
integration.
There is a general fear that the situation of denizens will
become more fragile and modify their status and thus their acceptance in the
society. It will be more difficult to get this status, thus endangering
stability and security, but at the same time justifying a lower standard for the
non-holders of the permit by its sole existence. In France, this permit becomes
an intermediate status between foreigners and citizens, preventing any
reconsideration of national-citizenship. There is no longer any automatic path
from legal foreigner to the status of denizenship.
In a similar way, the
applicant for naturalisation must have had his habitual residence for the past 5
years in France
(25), must be of
‘good morals and
behaviour’
(26), must be
assimilated into the French
community
(27), particularly through
a sufficient knowledge of the language, and must not have been sentenced to more
than 6 months imprisonment
(28) and
must not be subject to any deportation order. These conditions are very close
to those for the ‘carte de resident’, which is problematic. There
is however no reference to ‘good morals and behaviour’ (which is
highly contentious) for the ‘carte de resident’. Yet, the permit may
be refused on the grounds of threat to public order. And if there is no
reference to ‘assimilation’ but rather to ‘integration’
which seems more favourable towards the toleration of difference, this appears
mainly as an evolution of vocabulary to describe the same purpose. There are too
many subjective criteria in the granting of the ‘carte de resident’.
In German law, there are until now two different kinds of permits for
denizens, namely the unlimited Aufenthaltserlaubnis and the
Aufenthaltsberechtigung. However, this latter is the highest and most secure
status that a denizen may get. For the first one, the applicant must have been
in possession of a limited Aufenthaltserlaubnis for more than 5 years, must have
a work permit or a special authorisation to exercise his profession, must be
able to orally express himself in German, must have a sufficient place of
living, and there must no deportation order in
force
(29). If he has no professional
activity, the permit will only be prolonged if he has sufficient financial means
of his own.
A foreigner will be granted the Aufenthalstberechtigung if
he is in possession of an Aufenthaltserlaubnis for 8 years, or if he has had an
unlimited Aufenthaltserlaubnis for more than 3 years, provided that he can
financially support himself from his own means, he has subscribed to a
retirement insurance scheme, he has not been sentenced in the last 3 years to a
period of 6 months imprisonment or more and he fulfils the last four conditions
for enjoyment of unlimited Aufenthaltserlaubnis. And the permanent permit
may be delivered if the applicant has an Aufenthaltserlaubnis for at
least 5 years.
The new draft defines only one unlimited permit, namely
the Niederlassungserlaubnis
(30). The
conditions are very close to those for the unlimited Aufenthaltserlaubnis, among
others the possession for 5 years of an Aufenthaltserlaubnis. However, there are
two new conditions, namely sufficient knowledge of German and basic knowledge of
the social and legal order and the German way of life, conditions which are
fulfilled if the applicant has completed a successful integration course
(paragraph 43). Indeed, there will exist for the first time an integration
programme with language and
orientation
(31) courses. And the
CDU-CSU proposes that the unsuccessful attending of the classes or their
interruption should justify the refusal of the granting of the
permit.
The new German draft is the most extreme, because it goes even
further than France to reach conditions which are higher than the British
conditions for naturalisation. It thus once again highlights the fact that what
is called ‘resident permit’ is no longer based on the sole
condition of lengthy residence. And this tendency goes counter to the
recognition of more rights and possibilities of participation for denizens. In
German law, there is a right for denizens to be
naturalised
(32), if they fulfil the
following conditions: 8 years of residence in
Germany
(33), being legally capable,
if there is no reason for him to be deported for public security reasons or
under peculiar danger, if he has a sufficient place of living and if he can
financially support himself
(34).
Moreover, he must not have protected or took part in activities against the free
and democratic legal order, he must have an Aufenthaltserlaubnis or an
Aufenthaltsberechtigung, and must have sufficient revenues. However, he may not
be naturalised if he has no sufficient knowledge of the language, acts against
public order or if there exists a reason for his deportation. In the new draft,
the period of 8 years may be reduced to 7 if the applicant has successfully
attended an integration courses
(35).
The conditions for naturalisation, especially in relation to the duration of
the residence period, are much too strict, and cannot be applied in a new theory
of citizenship, regarding the state of our current world.
Top | Contents | Bibliography
2- The neutral criterion of
residence as the first criterion for
‘solidarity-residenceship’
To base citizenship on residence necessarily requires us to define the
major criterion: residence. It does however not mean that it is the only
criterion necessary to qualify for citizenship.
a- The criterion of
habitual residence: double need of facts and intention
The civil law countries of continental Europe originally applied a domicile
test for conflicts of law, but, with the introduction of the Code Napoleon in
1804, began to move away from a domicile test to a nationality test. That does
however not imply that ‘residenceship’ is a retrograde form of
citizenship. Indeed, this model proposes a second but equal way (besides the
nationality test) to grant citizenship.
Domicile is generally equated in
domestic law to ‘habitual residence’. And immigration laws rather
talk about ‘residence’, ‘habitual residence’, than
domicile. Thus, whereas the German immigration law used to employ Niederlassung,
which would equate to domicile, as much as Aufenthalt, the 2002 Bill proposes to
replace all these considerations by ‘gewöhnlichen
Aufenthalt’(habitual residence). However, the new permanent permit will
now be called ‘domicile’ (‘Niederlassung’) instead of
Aufenthaltsberechtigung to separate it from the limited one which is a
‘residence’ (‘Aufenthalt’) permit. So the idea of
domicile seems to imply a more secure status and not only a factual but also an
intentional situation.
According to the German federal administrative
Court (BverfwG,30/05/02,p.1379) domicile has two aspects, namely an objective
one, which means that the centre of life must be in this place, and also a
subjective one, that there must exist a will to stay for a certain period of
time and not only provisionally. The factual and intentional aspects must both
be present. In contrast, there is no such reference to the intention in the mere
notion of ‘residence’, in German as in French laws.
Yet, in
the domain of immigration law, where they mostly refer to ‘habitual
residence’
(36), this notion of
intention is implied, if not explicit. Indeed, in French law, the residence
permit is necessary to determine the object and the stability of the stay. Thus,
there will be a great presumption of residence necessary for naturalisation if
the applicant has a ‘carte de resident’( see Circulaire DPM No
2000-254 of 12th May 2000 related to naturalisation). In other words, there is
not only a reference to the factual situation of the applicant but in addition
the notion of length and stability is taken into consideration. Similarly in
German law, the conditions of duration for naturalisation are necessarily
coupled with the possession of an unlimited residence permit. Only in British
naturalisation law is there an explicit mention of a necessary intention to
reside. But there is also a need for at least the year preceding the application
for naturalisation to have an unlimited residence permit.
Furthermore,
the directive’s proposal states that the duration of 5 years of residence
must have been legal and uninterrupted. Indeed, the proposal states that the
applicant cannot have been absent from the territory for more than six
consecutive months. Residence must additionally be legal, which means that the
applicant must have had a right of abode for 5 years. Both these conditions,
which also refer to an intention to stay, are common to domestic laws. This same
time of six consecutive months applies for the German Aufenthaltserlaubnis.
However, an absence of less than one year in French law does not in principle
impair the duration of five years required. And in British law, the applicant
must have been absent for not more than 450 days in total (one year and 3
months), not more than 90 (3 months) of those 450 falling during the final 12
month period. This is both stricter and easier, since there is no restriction of
consecutive absence.
French law also explicitly requires a legal stay,
whereas a similar requirement is implicit in British and German law, since they
require the possession of a resident permit for the grant of an unlimited
permit. Moreover, in British law, after 14 years of illegal stay, the applicant
may apply for naturalisation
(37). A
better solution might be to grant citizenship automatically to those who have a
legal residence, but on a discretionary basis for those illegally resident,
without increasing the length of stay required.
The period of residence
required is currenlty 3 years for the ‘carte of resident’ in France
but will become five years. It is also five years in the European directive.
Holding a residence permit for four years is generally required for the grant of
ILR in British law. German law requires five years of possession of an
Aufenthaltserlaubnis in the new draft to get the Niederlassungserlaubnis. It is
the same to get an unlimited Aufenthaltserlaubnis under the current law, but it
necessitates 8 years of the possession of an Aufenthaltserlaubnis to get the
Aufenthaltsberechtigung. Regarding naturalisation, it is five years in France
and Great-Britain (and in the previous year the applicant must have been in
possession of an ILR) and 8 years in Germany. The duration of five years seems
to be adequate because it implies a certain length of stay and intention to
settle in the host country. Moreover, this period of 5 years is applied in the
majority of the member-states.
It is suggested that the general principle
should be that a period of five years' legal and uninterrupted habitual
residence (taking account of both factual and intentional aspects) should be
required. In the case of an applicant illegally present for a part of the
required period, citizenship should be granted on discretion.
b- supplementary
conditions and effects of citizenship
A supplementary condition regarding the respect of public security and
public order can be envisaged but only if it is severely restricted, so as to
limit the discretion, and, sometimes, arbitrariness, of the authorities. The
reference made by the European Commission to the directive 64/221/EC might be a
satisfactory solution. Moreover, we may imagine a condition for
‘Residenceship’ that could be the knowledge of the language, but
again this needs to be clearly and strictly defined to prohibit discretion and
discrimination. There should be no reference to the condition of integration,
because this is too vague, becoming an exclusionary condition for being granted
both the status of citizen and the permanent residence permit. This is
unfavourable to immigrants under the cover of the exact opposite. It is
additionally presented by many countries as an aim for naturalisation (denizens
get naturalised so that they may be integrated). It is thus supposed to be both
a condition and an aim. It is in other words contradictory. Finally, this
condition of integration reflects the problem of national-citizenship based on a
mythical homogeneous population, namely its incapacity to deal with
difference.
Citizenship through residence should be available only on
the demand of the applicant. It is already the case for the permanent residence
permits in the European Union and the general principle regarding
naturalisation. This is important, because citizenship should be at the will of
the applicant. Indeed, becoming citizen is not the only path. They must have the
choice and be controllers of their future.
For the same reason , the
authorities should enjoy no discretion in relation to the grant of citizenship,
other than in the case of illegal entry or presence; otherwise, there will not
be two actors involved and participating but the grant will be at exclusively at
the will of one, the state. Once the conditions are met, the applicant must
become a citizen, as is the case for the EU long-term resident permit in the
proposed directive. By contrast, there is no right in principle for a denizen to
be naturalised or to get the ‘carte de resident’ in France.
Similarly, the German and British authorities have discretion for
naturalisation. Yet, some are entitled to become citizens in British law (as in
French law) under the process of registration (particularly Commonwealth
citizens who do not have any full right of abode). For the ILR, it is also under
the full discretion of the secretary of state for the home department (except
special cases). Under German law, the applicant is entitled to get the
Aufenthaltsberechtigung if he was for 8 years in possession of an
Aufenthaltselaubnis. But if he was only in its possession for 5 years, the
authorities have discretion.
A ceremony of citizenship’s pledge
could be imagined. According to the new British
law
(38), the citizenship oath and
pledge is compulsory before being granted citizenship. However, rather than
references to God and loyalty, we could imagine a pledge on democratic values,
the rule of law and the importance of tolerance and non-discrimination.
The grant of citizenship should be permanent, there being no question of
it being for a limited time, unlike the residence permits (granted for ten years
renewable automatically in France or five years (rather than ten) according to
the Council's proposed directive. (Residence is granted for an unlimited period
in Great-Britain or in Germany.)
Yet, its effect is different. Indeed,
regarding the permanent resident permits, all the laws studied ensure a better
protection against deportation, which may only be in case of a breach of public
order or a very serious threat. With ‘residenceship’, however, it
goes beyond that, since obligations weighing on ‘ex-foreigners’ will
only be those applicable to nationals in relation with public security. There
will be no longer be any possibility of deportation, as in the case of
naturalised persons under the present regime. Moreover, the neo-citizens will
have equal rights. They will particularly enjoy all political rights: the right
to vote and stand for an election at all levels of the
state.
‘Residenceship’ would facilitate access to citizenship
for excluded inhabitants, without, however, denying a peculiar identity to the
state. Social relations would not be pre-imposed (on the basis of nationality)
so as to allow a social recognition for all. On the other hand, tolerant social
relations based on solidarity still require rules and will. Neither a too
demanding pre-determined citizenship, nor a too low concept preventing any
shared values.
This necessitates new laws in all the member states, and consequently at the
European Union level, which could be done through a directive if Community law
acquired this competence. To acquire citizenship on the basis of residence would
be an equal second way alongside nationality in order to secure a both passive
and active fair citizenship. The additional criterion of residence for citizenship
is the way to secure a full and integrative citizenship.
Top | Contents
Bibliography
Aleinikoff, A T and Klusmeyer, D, 2001 ‘Citizenship today: Global
perspectives and practices’ in T.Alexander Aleinikoff and Douglas
Klusmeyer Editors,
Carnegie endowment for international peace
Archibugi, D, Held, D and Koehler, M, 1998 ‘Re-imagining political
community, studies in cosmopolitan democracy’ (Polity
Press).
Bauboeck, Rainer, ‘Social cohesion and life quality’
available
at
http://www.social.coe.int/fr/cohesion/action/publi/migrants/juridiq.htm
Calhoun,
C, 1994
Social Theory and the Politics of Identity, (Blackwell).
Dunne, M and Bonazzi. T, 1995
Citizenship and rights in multicultural
societies (Keele University
Press).
Hailbronner, K,
‘Ausländerrecht Kommentar’, 4
Ordner zur
Fortsetzung.
Hammar, T, 1990 “Democracy and the Nation
State”,
Research in Ethnic relations series,
(Avebury).
Laferriere, F J, 2000
Droit des Etrangers (PUF).
Kloesel, A, Christ, R and Häußer, O, ‘Deutsches
Ausländerrecht’, Kommentar, 3
Ordner zur Fortsetzung Kommentar zum
Ausländergesetz und zu den wichtigsten ausländerrechtlichen
Vorschriften.
Kveinen, E, ‘Citizenship in a Post-Westphalian
Community: Beyond External Exclusion?’ available at
http://www.essex.ac.uk/ecpr/events/jointsessions/paperarchive/copenhagen/ws6/kveinen.PDF.
Macdonald,
I and Webber, F, 2001
Macdonalds Immigration Law and Practice
(Butterworths Law).
Oommen, T K, 2002
Pluralism, Equality and
identity. Comparative studies (Oxford University Press).
Parekh, B, 2000
Rethinking multiculturalism, cultural diversity and political theory.
Renner G, 1999 ‘Ausländerrecht Kommentar’
CH
Beck.
Tchen, V and Renault-Malignac, F, 2001
Code de
l’entrée et du séjour des étrangers en France
(Jurisclasseur, Litec)
Ward Ian, 1996 ‘(Pre)conceptions in European
law’ 23:2
Journal of Law and Society pp. 198-212.
Footnotes
(1) This term is understood to
include non EU citizens, and among those, the non-privileged, i.e. the families
of EU nationals (see the Singh case (C-370/90,
[1992] ECR I-4265) and the progressive
Carpenter case: Case C-60/00,
[2002] ECR I-6279,
http://curia.eu.int/jurisp)
and the nationals of a contracting state (through the Association Agreement
(AA) or through the EEA). Although a more liberal treatment of migrants of associated
states is implied with the Association Agreement, a limited freedom of movement
was only granted within the framework of EEC/Turkey AA. See also ECJ, Case 12/86
Demirel [1987] ECR 3719
(2)
According to this theory, based on Kantian theory of a universal morality, all
human beings should be bearers of rights regardless of their nationality and
belonging.
(3)
The classical texts, such as the Bill of Rights or the Magna Carta were
concerned with granting power to the parliament against the Crown for a
‘democratic’ balance of
power.
(4)
In France, like the UK or Germany, one condition to carry out most of the
nationality functions is to be a national. However, interestingly, the White
Paper plans to remove these limits by revising the Race Relations Act 1976.
White Paper, “Secure Borders, safe Heaven: Integration within diversity in
modern Britain”,
http://www.official-documents.co.uk/document/cm53/5387/cm5387.pdf
(5)
The idea of ‘de facto’ citizenship refers to the situation of
denizens, who do not have the status of citizens, but who are factually
citizens, since part of the society. However, this expression is misleading,
because it implies that they do benefit –in fact, if not in law- from an
equal participation and status within the society and this is not realistic.
They are not co-citizens since they do not have citizens’ rights and thus
depend on exceptional rules applicable to foreigners/outsiders, rules which
delineate and discriminate vis-à-vis
nationals.
(6)http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/hudoc/ViewRoot.asp?Item=7&Action=Html&X=507182845&Notice=0&Noticemode=&RelatedMode=0
(7)
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights: Freedom of movement
(article 12): 02/11/1999. CCPR/C/21/Rev.1/Add.9, CCPR General Comment
27.
(8)
It is only conceivable if there are unreasonable obstacles to be naturalised or
particular hurdles placed by the country of origin to be naturalised.
http://www.unhchr.ch/tbs/doc.nsf/385c2add1632f4a8c12565a9004dc311/360d2ade0db8f4d80256713005a23bd?OpenDocument.
Communication No538/1993: Canada. 16/12/1996
(9)
She answers here to Andrew Linklater (“Re-imagining political community,
studies in cosmopolitan democracy”, edited by Daniele Archibugi, David
Held and Martin Koehler, Polity Press, 1998, Chapter 6, “Citizenship and
sovereignty in the post-Westphalia European state”, Andrew Linklater) in
“Citizenship in a Post-Westphalian Community: Beyond External
Exclusion?”, Else Kveinen, p.21, Vol.6, no1, March
2002.
(10)
This indicates her preference for a ‘cosmopolitan citizenship’ which
does not differentiate between citizens and non-citizens according to the
Kantian tradition of the existence of a universal moral law osculating the
active aspect of citizenship for the sake of
rights.
(11)
According to article 63 EC Treaty (Amsterdam modification), there is a share
right to propose secondary legislation for the Commission and the member-states
regarding politics of
immigration.
(12)
Proposal COM(2001)127final, 2001/0074 (CNS). It is close to the never adopted
chapter 8 of the Commission’s proposal for a Council Act establishing the
Convention on Rules for the Admission of Third-country nationals, 30/07/1997
(COM(97)387final).
(13)
Access to employment and self-employed activity but outside public authority;
education and vocational training; recognition of diplomas, certificate and
other qualifications; social protection, including social security and health
care; social assistance; social and tax benefits; access to goods and services;
freedom of association and affiliation and membership of an organisation
representing workers or employers; free access to the entire territory of the
member-states
concerned.
(14)
See amendments 34 and 35, European Parliament Report on the proposal for a
Council Directive concerning the status of third-country nationals long-term
residents, RR\302293EN.doc, 30/11/2001, Final A5-0436/2001.
(15)
Vittorino has, for example, in a speech in June 2003 advocated to recognise a
catalogue of rights for denizens. Moreover, the Commission proposals are in
general generous and then denatured by the member-states. Even the Tampere
summit did proclaim the importance of the integration of denizens but
member-states actually enact contradictory
laws.
(16) Article 1 of the 1930 Hague
Convention, recalled in Article 3 of the European Convention on Nationality
of 06/11/1997.
http://conventions.coe.int/Treaty/en/Treaties/Html/166.htm
(17)
“Social cohesion and life quality”, Rainer
Bauboeck.
http://www.social.coe.int/fr/cohesion/action/publi/migrants/juridiq.htm
(18)
Hammar’s model of the three entry gates: the first step is entry and right
to remain, the second is the rights immigrants are being granted as denizens and
the third one is
naturalisation.
(19)
One proof is that lot of naturalised immigrants are still not considered as
legitimate citizens. The notion ‘naturalisation’ in itself -meaning
becoming natural- carries the idea of sameness. The German expression
‘Einbuergerung’ (becoming a citizen) is neutral and should be
adopted in other languages
(‘citizenisation’/‘citoyenisation’).
(20)
Wistrich for example suggested to extend citizenship to all tax-payers
(monetised contract). See “(Pre)conceptions in European law”, Ian
Ward, Journal of Law and Society, Vol. 23, no2, June 1996,
pp.198-212.
(21)
Resolution at its
393
rd
session on 18-19 September 2002: Calls on the Convention “to examine the
possibility of granting Union citizenship to third country nationals with
long-term resident
status”.
(22)
Inter-institutional file 2001/0074 (CNS),
10
th
June 2003, General Secretariat of the Council of the EU. Political agreement
reached on the
20
th of
June 2003 at the Thessalonica
summit.
(23)
The new immigration Bill adopted by the Assemblee Nationale on the
28
th of
October
2003.
(24)
See Art.6 newly defined : « Quand la loi le prévoit, la
délivrance première de la carte de résident est
subordonnée a l’intégration 5satisfaisante de
l’étranger dans la société francaise, notamment au
regard de sa connaissance de la langue francaise et des principes qui
régissent la République francaise, qui doit être
satisfaisante, ainsi que de son comportement au regard de l’ordre
public ». And new art.14: « Tout étranger qui
justifie d’une résidence non interrompue, conforme aux lois et
règlements en vigueur, de 5 années en France peut obtenir une
carte de résident. La décision d’accorder ou refuser est
prise en tenant compte des éléments qu’il peut faire valoir
pour établir son intégration dans la société
francaise dans les conditions prévues a l’article 6 et les faits
qu’il peut invoquer a l’appui de son
intention de
s’établir durablement en
France ».
(25)
Article 21-17 French Civil
Code.
(26)
Article 21-23 Civil Code: « de bonnes vies et
mœurs ».
(27)
Article
21-24.
(28)
Article
21-27.
(29)
Paragraph 24-1
Ausländergesetz.
(30)
Aufenthaltsgesetz,
20
th
June 2002, Paragraph 9. The Bundestag voted on the
9
th of
May 2003 the unmodified Immigration Bill (which was voided by the Constitutional
Court in September 2002 for procedural reasons). But the proposal was rejected
by the Bundesrat on
20
th of
June 2003. A consensus could be found by the end of December
2003.
(31)
Orientation courses are aimed to acquire a sufficient knowledge of the legal
order, culture and history of Germany, particularly the democratic state, the
principle of rule of law, tolerance, freedom of religion and equality of rights.
See the
Ausländerintegrationskursverordnung.
(32)
Paragraph 85
Ausländergesetz.
(33)
Before the 2000 Staatsangehörigkeitgesetz, the duration of stay required
was 15
years.
(34)
All these conditions, except for duration, are the same as for the general
naturalisation (article 8
Staatsangehörigkeitsgesetz).
(35)
Article 10 of the Aufenthaltsgesetz
2002.
(36)
For example, article 21-17 French Civil Code regarding naturalisation states
that the applicant must have for 5 years his ‘habitual residence’ in
France.
(37)
However because it is at the discretion of the authorities, it is very risky for
the applicants because they might then be expelled for illegal stay rather than
having a chance for
naturalisation.
(38)
New section 42 1981 Act by the 2002 Act, schedule
1
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