This open access book takes a multi-disciplinary approach to the phenomenon of investment migration in order to better understand it and its legal, political, and conceptual implications.
The book consists of three parts. The first part documents recent trends in investment migration and seeks to comprehend its implications for our understanding of the concept of citizenship. The second part provides a legal and normative assessment of investment migration, from the perspective of both EU and international law. The third part presents case studies on investment migration practices in countries around the world, including countries that have so far remained under-researched. The book assembles several of the leading experts in the field, from law, sociology, and politics, and is based on a selection of the most interesting contributions to Investment Migration Working Papers. It gives a balanced, expert analysis of a sometimes controversial field of the law of immigration and citizenship.
The ebook editions of this book are available under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by Central European University.
I. Investor migration: Recent trends and context
1. Global Citizenship 2.0 – The Growth of Citizenship by Investment Programs
Kristin Surak, London School of Economics, UK
2. New-generation Skilled Migration Policies and the Changing Fabric of Membership: Talent as Output and the Headhunting State
Francesca Strumia, University of Sheffield, UK
3. Citizenship Quality as a Tool to Explain the Growth of CBI Industry
Dimitry Kochenov, Central European University and University of Oxford, UK
4. Investment Residence and Citizenship: Approaches to Defining Success
Madeleine Sumption, University of Oxford, UK
5. Citizenship by Investment and Residency by Investment: Just the Tip of the Iceberg? The Pervasiveness of Financial Considerations in Contemporary Citizenship and Migration Laws
Odile Ammann, University of Zürich, Switzerland
II. Legal and Normative Perspectives on Investor Migration
6. Nottebohm and ‘Genuine Link’: Anatomy of a Jurisprudential Illusion
Peter J. Spiro, Temple Law School
7. Investment Migration and State Autonomy: A Quest for the Relevant Link
Matjaž Tratnik & Petra Weingerl, University of Maribor, Slovenia
8. EU Competence and the Attribution of Nationality in Member States
Daniel Sarmiento, Complutense University, Madrid, Spain
9. Investment Residence and the Concept of Residence in EU Law
Martijn van den Brink, University of Oxford, UK
III. Investor Migration in Europe and the World
10. The Cypriot Citizenship by Investment Programme as a Way to Cope with the Economic Crisis
Stéphanie Laulhé Shaelou, UCLAN Cyprus Law School and
Katerina Kalaitzaki, University of Edinburgh, School of Law
11. Investment Residence in the UK: Past and Future
Alina Tryfonidou, University of Reading, School of Law, UK
12. Wealth Influx, Wealth Exodus: Investment Migration from China to Portugal
Luuk van der Baren, European University Institute and
Hanwei Li, University of Liege
13. The Re-Invention of Investment Immigration in Canada and Constructions of Canadian Citizenship
Miriam Cohen, Lakehead University, Canada
14. ‘Internal’ Investment Migration: The Case of Investment Migration from Mainland China to Hong Kong
Qishi Fu, Private practice, Hong Kong
15. Why Some Countries Have More Billionaires Than Others? Explaining Variety in the Billionaire Intensity of GDP
Vladimir Popov, DOC Research Institute, Berlin
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