Abstract
British Citizenship is facing significant contemporary challenges in terms of failure to include ethnic minority citizens in an equal manner within the legal rights and protection of citizenship. Some examples of such failure are the hostile environment laws which have resulted in discrimination and deportation of citizens, new hurdles in becoming a citizen, and cancellation laws for conduct which have affect citizens with migrant connections more than those born British and holding only British nationality. This paper investigates why such legal inequalities persist by tracing modern day manifestations to the progress of law in this area from the days of subjecthood and Empire. It finds that, despite changes in nature of state and governance since days of Empire, contemporary British citizenship has inbuilt legal inequalities which persist from the time of subjecthood. Present inequalities are not just remnants of Empire; they are constructed on the legal archaeology of Empire.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly |
Volume | 71 |
Issue number | 2 |
Publication status | Published - 14 Aug 2020 |
Research Groups and Themes
- Centre for Law and History Research
- Centre for International Law
- Human Rights Implementation Centre
Keywords
- Subjecthood, Citizenship, Empire, Immigration, Nationality
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Professor Devyani Prabhat
- University of Bristol Law School - Professor of Law
- Migration Mobilities Bristol
- Cabot Institute for the Environment
Person: Academic , Member