Citizenship deprivation, security and human rights

In response to the rise of IS and the growing problem of foreign fighters, deprivation of citizenship of persons deemed to threaten the interests of the state has been revived as a key tool for security and counterterrorism. Yet, citizenship deprivation raises profound issues for human rights. In th...

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Main Author: Zedner, L
Format: Journal article
Published: Brill Academic Publishers 2016
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author Zedner, L
author_facet Zedner, L
author_sort Zedner, L
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description In response to the rise of IS and the growing problem of foreign fighters, deprivation of citizenship of persons deemed to threaten the interests of the state has been revived as a key tool for security and counterterrorism. Yet, citizenship deprivation raises profound issues for human rights. In the UK, the Immigration Act 2014 includes a power to deprive naturalized British citizens of their citizenship on security grounds, even if doing so would render individuals stateless. The UK government has argued that deprivation would satisfy the requirements of necessity and proportionality under Article 8(2) ECHR, provided it could be shown to be necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the UK. Yet the risks are not only to private and family life. Citizenship deprivation may also involve other rights (not least Articles 2 and 3) where the consequence of deprivation is that individuals suffer loss of life, torture, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. This article explores the genesis of citizenship deprivation resulting in statelessness and offers a strong critique on grounds of legality and rights. It also raises serious questions about its efficacy as a security strategy.
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spelling oxford-uuid:ffd1a508-0274-423b-b49f-2cd27a49a90f2022-03-27T13:47:54ZCitizenship deprivation, security and human rightsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:ffd1a508-0274-423b-b49f-2cd27a49a90fSymplectic Elements at OxfordBrill Academic Publishers2016Zedner, LIn response to the rise of IS and the growing problem of foreign fighters, deprivation of citizenship of persons deemed to threaten the interests of the state has been revived as a key tool for security and counterterrorism. Yet, citizenship deprivation raises profound issues for human rights. In the UK, the Immigration Act 2014 includes a power to deprive naturalized British citizens of their citizenship on security grounds, even if doing so would render individuals stateless. The UK government has argued that deprivation would satisfy the requirements of necessity and proportionality under Article 8(2) ECHR, provided it could be shown to be necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the UK. Yet the risks are not only to private and family life. Citizenship deprivation may also involve other rights (not least Articles 2 and 3) where the consequence of deprivation is that individuals suffer loss of life, torture, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. This article explores the genesis of citizenship deprivation resulting in statelessness and offers a strong critique on grounds of legality and rights. It also raises serious questions about its efficacy as a security strategy.
spellingShingle Zedner, L
Citizenship deprivation, security and human rights
title Citizenship deprivation, security and human rights
title_full Citizenship deprivation, security and human rights
title_fullStr Citizenship deprivation, security and human rights
title_full_unstemmed Citizenship deprivation, security and human rights
title_short Citizenship deprivation, security and human rights
title_sort citizenship deprivation security and human rights
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