Citizenship, Alienage, and the Modern Constitutional State

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To have a nationality is a human right. But between the nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries, virtually every country in the world adopted laws that stripped citizenship from women who married foreign men. Despite the resulting hardships and even statelessness experienced by married women, it took until 1957 for the international community to condemn the practice, with the adoption of the United...
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To have a nationality is a human right. But between the nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries, virtually every country in the world adopted laws that stripped citizenship from women who married foreign men. Despite the resulting hardships and even statelessness experienced by married women, it took until 1957 for the international community to condemn the practice, with the adoption of the United...
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  • Formats: pdf
  • ISBN: 9781316682371
  • Publication Date: 1 Apr 2016
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press
  • Product language: English
  • Drm Setting: DRM