TY - BOOK AU - Barbulescu,Roxana AU - Goodman,Sara Wallace AU - Pedroza,Luicy ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Revising the Integration-Citizenship Nexus in Europe: Sites, Policies, and Bureaucracies of Belonging T2 - IMISCOE Research Series, SN - 9783031257261 AV - JV6001-9480 U1 - 304.8 23 PY - 2023/// CY - Cham PB - Springer International Publishing, Imprint: Springer KW - Emigration and immigration KW - Government policy KW - Social aspects KW - Human Migration KW - Migration Policy KW - Sociology of Migration N1 - 1. Conceptualising the Citizenship-Integration Nexus (Roxana Barbulescu, Sara Wallace Goodman, and Luicy Pedroza) -- Part 1. Integration Through Citizenship -- 2. Ideas of integration in citizenship laws and citizenship acquisition procedures in Belgium and the UK (Djordje Sredanovic) -- 3. Becoming Dutch at what cost? Increasing application fees and naturalisation rates of EU immigrants in the Netherlands (Floris Peters, Swantje Falcke and Maarten Vink) -- 4. Citizenship and naturalisation for migrants in the UK after Brexit (Marina Fernandez Reino and Madeleine Sumption) -- Part 2. Integration from Below -- 5. Immigrant Economic Rights in the European Union (Hannah M. Alarian) -- 6. Migrants, New citizens, Co-citizens and citizens by adoption – Regionalist parties’ framing of immigrants in the Basque Country, Corsica, South Tyrol, Scotland and Wales (Verena Wisthaler) -- 7. Intercultural Citizenship in the Making: Public Space and Belonging in Discriminatory Environments (Richard Zapata-Barrero and Zenia Hellgren) -- 8. “In London, I am a European citizen”: Brexit, emotions, and the politics of belonging (Nando Sigona and Marie Godin) -- Part 3. Integration from Above -- 9. “It just feels weird” – Irish External Voting and the ‘Brexit Irish’ (Vikki Barry Brown) -- 10. Between Integration and Dissociation: Intra-European Immigrants’ Life Experiences in Romania (Bogdan Voicu and Alin Croitoru) -- 11. EU Citizenship: A Tool for Integration? (Sara Wallace Goodman; Open Access N2 - This open access book critically re-examines the theoretical and empirical interconnections between integration and citizenship, specifically, naturalisation. With new, empirical-grounded analyses of what we term the “life of citizenship,” the central, shared contribution is showcasing how membership is informally achieved through everyday integration —usually around, but sometimes in spite of, formal citizenship requirements. By providing evidence of a nexus disjuncture, the book contributes to critical dialogues on immigrant integration and political incorporation, relevant for policymakers, civil society actors, and academics alike UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-25726-1 ER -