Fissures in EU citizenship : the deconstruction and reconstruction of the legal evolution of EU citizenship /

"A fundamental tenet of Plender's contention that the 'incipient' citizen can be seen to have emerged from the early case law on free movement is that the 'worker' can be construed as the early prototype of the citizen. This ties in particularly with the linkages made b...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Steinfeld, Martin
Published: Cambridge University Press,
Publisher Address: Cambridge, United Kingdom :
Publication Dates: 2022.
Literature type: Book
Language: English
Series: Cambridge studies in European law and policy
Subjects:
Summary: "A fundamental tenet of Plender's contention that the 'incipient' citizen can be seen to have emerged from the early case law on free movement is that the 'worker' can be construed as the early prototype of the citizen. This ties in particularly with the linkages made between market citizenship and EU Citizenship. The legal evolution of the 'worker' has arguably been the foundation stone of all free movement of persons law upon which the later temple of citizenship was built"--
Item Description: Based on author's thesis (doctoral - University of Cambridge, 2015) issued under title: Free movement of persons and social constructivism? : a social constructivist perspective on the emergence of the concept of EU citizenship prior to its formal establishment in the Treaty on European Union.
Carrier Form: xvi, 394 pages ; 24 cm.
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references (pages 346-382) and index.
ISBN: 9781108490894
1108490891
Index Number: KJE5124
CLC: D750.24
Call Number: D750.24/S822
Contents: Is a 'worker' really a worker? A discursive assessment of the substantive evolution of the concept of the 'community worker' -- The role explicitly economically inactive and potentially socially excluded categories of individuals played in the subjective creation of EU citizenship -- A discourse of equal treatment? -- The citizen is born : literal utterances of the citizen prior to 1992 -- Genealogy and the potential for dismantling citizenship? -- Concluding remarks