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Citizenship, Alienage, and the Modern Constitutional State Helen Irving (University of Sydney)

Citizenship, Alienage, and the Modern Constitutional State By Helen Irving (University of Sydney)

Citizenship, Alienage, and the Modern Constitutional State by Helen Irving (University of Sydney)


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Summary

This book tells the long-overlooked history of women whose citizenship was stripped through marriage to foreign-born men in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Including numerous personal histories, it will be important reading for anyone interested in law, citizenship and gender studies.

Citizenship, Alienage, and the Modern Constitutional State Summary

Citizenship, Alienage, and the Modern Constitutional State: A Gendered History by Helen Irving (University of Sydney)

To have a nationality is a human right. But between the nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries, virtually every country in the world adopted laws that stripped citizenship from women who married foreign men. Despite the resulting hardships and even statelessness experienced by married women, it took until 1957 for the international community to condemn the practice, with the adoption of the United Nations Convention on the Nationality of Married Women. Citizenship, Alienage, and the Modern Constitutional State tells the important yet neglected story of marital denaturalization from a comparative perspective. Examining denaturalization laws and their impact on women around the world, with a focus on Australia, Britain, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand and the United States, it advances a concept of citizenship as profoundly personal and existential. In doing so, it sheds light on both a specific chapter of legal history and the theory of citizenship in general.

About Helen Irving (University of Sydney)

Helen Irving is a Professor at the University of Sydney Faculty of Law and a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia, and of the Australian Academy of Law. She has published widely on constitutional law, history, citizenship, most recently with a particular focus on gender, and is the author of Gender and the Constitution (Cambridge, 2008).

Table of Contents

Preface; Introduction; 1. The emergence of modern citizenship; 2. Naturalization; 3. The impact of marital denaturalization; 4. Marital citizenship and war; 5. Marital denaturalization begins to unravel; 6. The international response; 7. What is a citizen?; Bibliography.

Additional information

NLS9781107664234
9781107664234
1107664233
Citizenship, Alienage, and the Modern Constitutional State: A Gendered History by Helen Irving (University of Sydney)
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2017-05-11
302
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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