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Denationalization

2017
Citizenship in the modern state is in many ways uniquely secure as a status. Yet states have always possessed some bases through which they may remove citizenship, including fraud, disloyalty, acquisition of another citizenship, marriage to a foreigner, and threat to public order.
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The Denationalization of Immigration Politics

2008
Many scholars have recently argued that nation-state—centered approaches in comparative sociology and political science are obsolete. In this view, we have entered, or are about to enter, a new “postnational” or “transnational” era characterized by complex and qualitatively new patterns of multilevel governance, in which the nation-state still plays a ...
Ruud Koopmans   +3 more
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Bibliodiversity: Denationalizing and Defrancophonizing Francophonie

2020
Language policy has historically served to bolster France’s overseas colonial ambitions. Similarities have been recorded in the postcolonial era under the aegis of francophonie and in the French government policy agenda. While President Emmanuel Macron has expressed the desire to turn a new page, critics highlight how diplomatic soft power initiatives ...
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Denationalizing Identities

This book, a study of four important diasporic director-playwrights (Gao Xingjian, Stan Lai Sheng-chuan, Danny Yung Ning Tsun, and Kuo Pao Kun), shows the impact of theater on ideas of “Chineseness” across China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore. At the height of the Cold War, the “Bamboo Curtain” divided the “two Chinas” across the Taiwan Strait ...
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The Denationalization of Slaves

2005
Abstract One of the characteristic traits of a slave was his denationalisation. Slaves had to be removed from their family, culture, and country of origin ‘to be introduced and reproduced as aliens in the slave-owning society’. Once he was (re)introduced as an alien, the slave's links to his ancestors and origins were disregarded, and he
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The Nationality of Denationalized Palestinians

Nordic Journal of International Law, 2005
AbstractOne in three refugees in the world today is Palestinian. The majority of these refugees have no nationality because they were denationalised by Israel's Nationality Law in 1952 after they had fled or been expelled from their homeland in 1948. Israel has refused to allow the majority Palestinian refugees, being displaced in 1948, the right to ...
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