Original scientific paper
https://doi.org/10.31297/hkju.17.4.5
Ethnic Understanding of the Nation and Dual Citizenship: A Comparison of Citizenship Policies in Sweden, Germany, and Croatia
Slaven Ravlić
; Faculty of Law, University of Zagreb
Abstract
This paper compares the understandings of dual citizenship in citizenship policies of three EU member states – Sweden, Germany, and Croatia. They all share one important element: long-term ethnic understanding of the nation and the dominance of the ius sanguinis principle in determining citizenship rights. The analysis showed that these three states significantly differ in the attitude of their citizenship policies towards dual citizenship. Sweden has liberal, while German
and Croatia have restrictive policies. At the same time German policy is shifting in the liberal direction, while Croatian maintained its restrictiveness. The citizenship policies depend on the dominant understanding of the nation, but their development is the product of political conflicts between political actors focused on their specific goals. Sweden followed the multicultural model with the social democratic politics of the welfare stare as a “home” for all its inhabitants, which
led to the consensual acceptance of dual citizenship. Germany followed the assimilationist politics, which at the beginning denied the existence of immigrants, treating them as a temporary phenomenon (“guest” workers), but then it accepted the reality of their existence. Both states had their traditional understandings of the nation and the citizens, with the principle of ius sanguinis as the basis for citizenship rights, remodelled in accordance with the challenges faced by the political elite, and depending on the dominance of ideologically left or right political forces. Transformation of citizenship policies in Sweden and Germany
can show us how they decided, despite the strength of the ethnic understanding of the nation, to move towards gradual acceptance of the understanding that the nation is based on its citizens, mostly under the influence of them becoming emigrant countries. In contrast, Croatia led inconsistent citizenship policy. In the 1990s Croatia introduced ethnically-based dual citizenship, which was partly constrained after the changes in 2011, but with simultaneous tightening of naturalization rights for foreigners. Croatia, thus, transformed its citizenship
policy, albeit in the form of restrictive normalisation.
Keywords
citizenship policy; dual citizenshi; Sweden; Germany, Croatia
Hrčak ID:
193943
URI
Publication date:
20.12.2017.
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