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16 - Citizenship Revocation and the Normalisation of Ex-post Conditionality in Investment Migration Law

from Part III - Case Studies and Implications

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2023

Dimitry Vladimirovich Kochenov
Affiliation:
Central European University in Budapest and Vienna
Kristin Surak
Affiliation:
London School of Economics and Political Science
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Summary

In this chapter, I take the revocation of citizenship as the starting point of analysis. How much room is there for ex-post facto conditionality in citizenship allocation and, more broadly, in immigration law? Plentiful examples demonstrate a clear and worrisome shift in the direction of making potentially any migration status not acquired by blood conditional upon perceived good character and the lack of criminal indictments, opening a Pandora’s Box of further complexity for investment migration and its implications. If anyone can lose investment citizenship anywhere in the world as a result of a criminal case started by China, is it really citizenship we are talking about?

Type
Chapter
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Citizenship and Residence Sales
Rethinking the Boundaries of Belonging
, pp. 408 - 435
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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