Passports for Sale: How (Un)Meritocratic Are Citizenship by Investment Programmes?
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_F318ACC9CDDF
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Passports for Sale: How (Un)Meritocratic Are Citizenship by Investment Programmes?
Journal
European Journal of Migration and Law
ISSN
1388-364X
1571-8166
1571-8166
Publication state
Published
Issued date
07/10/2020
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
22
Number
3
Pages
309-337
Language
english
Abstract
In recent years, citizenship by investment (CBI) and residency by investment (RBI) programmes have been burgeoning throughout the world, including in a range of European States. At first sight, such programmes are blatantly anti-meritocratic: they hinge on a person’s wealth, and not on her skills, potential, and intrinsic qualities. Yet upon a closer look, the public discourse that surrounds CBI and RBI is influenced by the same meritocratic conceptions as those that have been driving domestic citizenship and immigration law in the past decades. In this article, I take a step back from existing debates about CBI to argue that the concept of meritocracy is key to understanding, supporting, but also challenging contemporary immigration and citizenship law, including CBI. First, I analyse the merits—if I may say so—of the concept of meritocracy. I then show the limitations of using meritocratic arguments to justify the existence of CBI schemes.
Keywords
Law, Demography
Web of science
Create date
02/08/2021 21:50
Last modification date
24/08/2021 17:05