« Center for Gender & Refugee Studies Summer 2013 Refugee and Human Rights Law Clerk Position | Main | Immigrant of the Day: Mark Keam (Korea) »
September 7, 2012
Immigration Article of the Day: When Women Were Aliens: The Neglected History of Derivative Marital Citizenship by Helen Irving
When Women Were Aliens: The Neglected History of Derivative Marital Citizenship by Helen Irving University of Sydney - Faculty of Law July 17, 2012 Sydney Law School
Abstract: Between the mid-nineteenth and mid-twentieth centuries, in virtually every country in the world, women who married foreign men were stripped of their citizenship, and turned into aliens in their own country. Marital denaturalization laws were supported by the international community until well after the Second World War: single citizenship, family unity, diplomatic convenience, and inter-state comity, were treated as imperatives that overrode women’s independent personal status. Such laws, which expanded at the very time when women were gaining legal and political rights, impacted radically, sometimes tragically, on individual lives, including rendering many thousands of women stateless. This essay gives an account of the emergence and evolution of such laws, with particular reference to Britain and the United States. It provides a ‘snapshot’ of individual cases, and an overview of the international community’s response.
KJ
September 7, 2012 in Current Affairs | Permalink
TrackBack
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341bfae553ef01774492b3dc970d
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Immigration Article of the Day: When Women Were Aliens: The Neglected History of Derivative Marital Citizenship by Helen Irving :