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French nationality law

French nationality law is historically based on the principles of jus soli (Latin for "right of soil") and jus sanguinis,[1] according to Ernest Renan's definition, in opposition to the German definition of nationality, jus sanguinis (Latin for "right of blood"), formalised by Johann Gottlieb Fichte.

Civil Code of the French
Articles 17 to 33-2
Code civil des Français
French Parliament
CitationArt. 17–33-2 C. civ
Territorial extentFrance
Enacted byFrench Parliament
Enacted22 July 1993
Commenced22 July 1993
Status: Amended

The 1993 Méhaignerie Law, which was part of a broader immigration control agenda to restrict access to French nationality and increase the focus on jus sanguinis as the nationality determinant for children born in France,[2] required children born in France of foreign parents to request French nationality between age 16 and age 21, rather than being automatically accorded citizenship at majority. This "manifestation of will" requirement was subsequently abrogated by the Guigou Law of 1998,[3] but children born in France of foreign parents remain foreign until obtaining legal majority.

Children born in France to tourists or other short-term visitors do not acquire French nationality by virtue of birth in France: residency must be proven. Since immigration became increasingly a political theme in the 1980s, both left-wing and right-wing governments have issued several laws restricting the possibilities of access to French nationality.[4][5]

Terminology edit

The distinction between the meaning of the terms citizenship and nationality is not always clear in the English language and differs by country. Generally, nationality refers to a person's legal belonging to a sovereign state and is the common term used in international treaties when addressing members of a country, while citizenship usually means the set of rights and duties a person has in that nation.[6]

Historically, French nationals held differing sets of civil and political rights depending on their religion, ethnicity, economic standing, and sex. The right to vote in French elections did not extend to women, foreigners who naturalised as French nationals, colonial subjects, persons who were not required to pay property taxes, and members of non-Christian faiths. In this way, not all French nationals were necessarily full citizens.[7]

History edit

In the society of the Ancien Régime, the rights of an individual depended on which social class they belonged to. The primary factor determining the privileges and obligations a person had was whether they were part of the nobility, clergy, or a higher socioeconomic level of the Third Estate. Foreigners who were not French subjects traditionally could not pass property to their descendants; the droit d'aubaine (right of windfall) allowed the sovereign to confiscate the property of a resident alien in the event of their death. This confiscation became gradually less frequent through the early modern period, with an increasing amount of exceptions granted to foreign merchants to encourage their immigration into the country. France later negotiated treaties with many European states that exempted their subjects from this tax on a reciprocal basis in the latter half of the 18th century.[8]

French nationality and citizenship were concepts that existed even before the French Revolution, loosely based on the premise that people spoke the same language within specific institutional frameworks.[9]

Afterward, in the late 1700s and early 1800s, France was fairly unique among countries in tying its nationality laws to its election laws, and working to increase the joint ambit of citizenship and the right of the franchise.[10]

19th century edit

There are three key dates in the legal history of naturalization:

Naturalization
Year Event
1804 Civil Code, which allowed the possibility of naturalization.
1851 third generation immigrants (those with one parent born on French soil) were allowed to naturalize.
1889 second generation immigrants (those born on French soil) were allowed to naturalize once they reached the age of majority.

Soon after the approval of the French constitutions, statesman Jean-Jacques-Régis de Cambacérès drafted and presented a new civil code that would unify private law, including nationality law—and with application for all French citizens outside of France.[10]

Third Republic edit

Military service and state education were two processes central to the creation of a common national culture. Military conscription (universal from 1872, in theory if not in practice) brought inhabitants of the state's regions together for the first time, creating bonds of friendship and encouraging the use of French rather than regional languages. Universal education (the aim of the Jules Ferry Laws, 1879–1886) brought the whole of the population into contact with state-sanctioned version of French history and identity. State teachers, the "Black hussars of the Republic,"[11] conveyed the national language to the people of the regions.

In a series of expansions in the late 1800s, French nationality law was liberalized for great conferment of French citizenship, partly with an eye to increasing French military ranks.[10] These included re-introduction of simple jus soli (at first with a right of the person to repudiate French citizenship, but that right was later removed), elimination of the loss of citizenship when emigrating from France, and repeal of the loss of citizenship by a French woman on marriage to a foreigner when she did not automatically obtain her husband's citizenship.[10]

20th century edit

In 1927, French nationality law was further loosened to increase naturalization so as to attract a larger work force for French industry.[10] The measure also extracted the nationality law from the French civil code and made it an independent text, as it had grown too large and unwieldy.[10]

Legislation in 1934, motivated by xenophobia, imposed burdens on naturalized citizens and provided the government powers to forfeit citizenship, which the Nazi-collaborator Vichy regime used widely.[10]

A 1945 post-war measure promulgated a comprehensive nationality code that established very lengthy and detailed rules to shield citizens from government whimsy.[10]

Amendments were by legislation in 1962 and by constitutions in 1946 and 1958, with the latter creating the status of "citoyen de la Communauté", vaguely akin to the British status of "Citizen of the United Kingdom and Colonies" established by the British Nationality Act 1948.[10]

The 1993 law that attempted to restrict conferral of French citizenship also transferred the contents of the Code de la Nationalité Française back into the Code Civil, where they had existed from 1803 until 1927.[2]

Denaturalization edit

According to Giorgio Agamben, France was one of the first European countries to pass denaturalization laws, in 1915, with regard to naturalized citizens of "enemy" origins. Its example was followed by most European countries.

As early as July 1940, Vichy France set up a special Commission charged with reviewing the naturalizations granted since the 1927 reform[citation needed] of the nationality law. Between June 1940 and August 1944, 15,000 persons, mostly Jews, were denaturalized.[12] This bureaucratic designation was instrumental in their subsequent internment and murder.

Multiple citizenship edit

Multiple citizenship was officially recognized for both men and women on 9 January 1973; since then, possession of more than one nationality does not affect French nationality.[13][14]

Before 19 October 1945, multiple nationality was prohibited and any French national who acquired another nationality before that day automatically lost French nationality unless they were male nationals under the obligation of military service and did not seek the release of their French nationality by decree.[15] Until 1927, women who married a non-French national were also[clarification needed] subject to the automatic loss of nationality if they acquired their husbands' nationalities upon marriage.[16]

The 1945 French Nationality Code (ordonnance n° 45–2441) added a provision to indicate that for a maximum period of 5 years following the "legal cessation of hostilities", the permission for the loss of nationality must be sought from the French government if the person was male and under the age of 50.[17] The transitional period was deemed to have ended on 1 June 1951.[18] Also, the new code specified that a woman would lose her French nationality only when she declared that she did not want to remain French after marriage.[19]

The 1954 amendment to the Nationality Code (loi n° 54-395) removed the five-year period and, retroactively from 1 June 1951, no male national of France under the age of 50 would be subject to the automatic loss provision (section 87) of the 1945 Nationality Code without the specific permission from the French government.[20] This limited the automatic loss of nationality to men over 50 and women, as the permissions to lose French nationality were automatically given to them upon their naturalizations.[21][18] In 2013, a woman who lost her French nationality under section 87 appealed to the Constitutional Council, which found the provision to be unconstitutional under the 1946 Constitution and the 1789 Declaration and ordered the reinstatement of her nationality.[22][18][23] As a result of this decision, all women who lost their nationality between 1951 and 1973 solely under section 87 may voluntarily request for the reinstatement of their nationality by invoking this decision, and their descendants would also be able to invoke this decision if their female ancestors have done so.[18][24]

Since 1973, dual nationality has been legalized for all French nationals, although a person might still be deprived of their French nationality under bilateral or multilateral treaties or agreements France concluded with other countries.[25] In 2007, the Ministry of Justice concluded that a French male residing in the Netherlands and naturalized as a Dutch national in 2006 based on his marriage to a Dutch man lost his French nationality upon naturalization, because a 1985 agreement between France and the Netherlands stipulated that any national of either country who acquired the other country's nationality would cease to be a national of their country of origin.[26] A provision in the agreement provided exemptions for married couples, but as France did not recognize same-sex marriage in 2006, it was deemed to be not applicable to him as he was not considered to be married under French law.[26]

Due to the case which sparked national outrage, the Sarkozy administration announced that it would be taking steps to denounce some portions in the agreements with the Netherlands and other countries in 2009.[26] France later denounced Chapter I of the Council of Europe's Convention on the Reduction of Cases of Multiple Nationality and on Military Obligations in Cases of Multiple Nationality of May 6, 1963. The denunciation took effect on March 5, 2009.[27]

European integration edit

French involvement in European integration began in the immediate post-war period of the late 1940s. Initial cooperation was focused on the economy through the Organisation for European Economic Co-operation as a condition for receiving aid from the United States provided by the Marshall Plan. The post-war political situation created the circumstances that facilitated the establishment of further organisations to integrate Western Europe along common social and security policies. France became a founding member of the European Communities (EC) in 1951, a set of organisations that eventually developed into the European Union (EU).[28] French citizens participated in their first European Parliament elections in 1979[29] and have been able to work in other EC/EU countries under the freedom of movement for workers established by the 1957 Treaty of Rome.[30] With the creation of European Union citizenship by the 1992 Maastrict Treaty, free movement rights were extended to all nationals of EU member states regardless of their employment status.[31] The scope of these rights was further expanded with the establishment of the European Economic Area in 1994 to include any national of an EFTA member state except for Switzerland,[32] which concluded a separate free movement agreement with the EU that came into force in 2002.[33]

Acquisition and loss of nationality edit

Entitlement by birth, descent, or residence as a child edit

All persons born within the country to at least one French national or foreign parent who themself was born in France automatically receive French nationality at birth.

All persons born abroad to at least one French parent are automatically French from birth.[34] French nationality can be continually transmitted through each generation born abroad provided that each subsequent generational birth is registered. Abandoned children found in France with unclear parentage and any other children born in the country who would otherwise be stateless are granted French nationality.[35]

Individuals born in France on or before 31 December 1993 automatically acquired French nationality at birth if at least one parent was born in former French colonies prior to independence.[36] Since that date, only children of Algerians born in French Algeria who were resident in metropolitan France for at least five years on or before 2 July 1962 have been able to automatically acquire French nationality at birth.[37]

Children born in France to foreign parents born overseas are automatically granted French nationality at age 18 if they are domiciled in France and have been resident in the country for at least five years since age 11.[38] Those under age 16 who were born in the country and resident in France at age eight are eligible for French nationality by declaration, executed on their behalf by their parents; an eligible child's explicit consent to acquire nationality is required after age 13.[39]

Voluntary acquisition edit

Foreigners over age 18 may naturalise as French nationals at the discretion of the government after residing in the country for at least five years. Applicants must hold no criminal record and demonstrate that they have sufficiently assimilated to the French community (typically by becoming proficient in the French language and confirming knowledge in national republican values). Candidates who are married or have children must provide evidence of their domicile in France in addition to their own. The five-year residence requirement may be exceptionally waived for foreign nationals enlisted in the French Armed Forces injured in active combat and any person considered to have made an extraordinary cultural or economic contribution to the French state.[40] Alternatively, members of the French Foreign Legion may apply for naturalisation after three years of service.[41][42] Noncitizens married to French nationals are eligible to acquire nationality by declaration after four years of marriage and cohabitation. Couples married overseas must re-register their marriage in the French civil register.[38]

Loss and resumption edit

French nationality can be relinquished by making a declaration of renunciation, provided that the declarant ordinarily resides overseas and already possesses another nationality. Former French nationals may subsequently apply to reacquire French nationality. Persons convicted of serious crimes such as terrorism or espionage may be stripped of their nationality within 10 years of their naturalisation.[43]

French citizenship and identity edit

According to the French Republic, the French people are those who are in possession of French nationality. According to the French Constitution, "France shall be an indivisible, secular, democratic and social Republic. It shall ensure the equality of all citizens before the law, without distinction of origin, race or religion. It shall respect all beliefs. It shall be organised on a decentralised basis." Article 1 13 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine

Since the middle of the 19th century, France has exhibited a very high rate of immigration, mainly from Southern Europe, Eastern Europe, the Maghreb, Africa and Asia. According to a 2004 report by INED researcher Michèle Tribalat, France has approximately 14 million persons (out of nearly 63 million, or approximately 22%) (see demographics of France) of foreign ascendancy (immigrants or with at least one parent or grandparent immigrant). In 2015, 7.3 million people born in France had at least one immigrant parent (roughly 11% of the population). The origin of the descendants of immigrants reflects the immigration flows that France has experienced for over a century.[44]

The absence of official statistics on French citizens of foreign origin is deliberate. Under French law passed after the Vichy regime, it is forbidden to categorize people according to their ethnic origins. In France, like in many other European countries, censuses do not collect information on supposed ancestry. Moreover, all French statistics are forbidden to have any references concerning ethnic membership. Thus, the French government's assimilationist stance towards immigration as well as towards regional identities and cultures, together with the political heritage of the French Revolution, has led to the development of a French identity which is based more on the notion of citizenship than on cultural, historical or ethnic ties.[45]

For that reason, French identity must not necessarily be associated with the "ethnic French people" but can be associated with either a nationality and citizenship, or a culture and language-based group. The latter forms the basis for La Francophonie, a group of French-speaking countries, or countries with historical and cultural association to France. The concept of "French ethnicity" exists outside France's borders, in particular in Quebec where some people claim membership to a "French ethnic group", but again many view it as not so much ethnicity-based as language-based and would also include immigrants from, for example, Lebanon and Haiti. France's particular self-perception means that French identity may include a naturalized, French-speaking ethnic Portuguese, Italian, Spaniard, Pole, Romanian, Lebanese, Vietnamese, Tunisian, Algerian or Moroccan. Nonetheless, like in other European countries, some level of discrimination occurs, and there are higher unemployment rates among job-seekers with foreign-sounding names.

Rights and obligations of French citizens edit

In modern France, in general, the rights are fundamentally the same as those in other EU countries.

Despite the official discourse of universality, French nationality has not meant automatic citizenship. Some categories of French people have been excluded, throughout the years, from full citizenship:

  • Women: Until the Liberation, they were deprived of the right to vote. The provisional government of General de Gaulle accorded them this right by the 21 April 1944 prescription.[46]
  • Military: For a long time, the military was called the Grande muette ("The Big Mute") in reference to its prohibition against interfering in political life. During a large part of the Third Republic (1871–1940), the Army was in the main anti-republican (and thus counterrevolutionary), the Dreyfus Affair and the 16 May 1877 crisis that led to a monarchist coup d'état by MacMahon being examples of this anti-republican spirit. That character of the military would make them gain the right to vote only after the 17 August 1945 prescription, the contribution of De Gaulle to the interior French Resistance, which reconciled the Army with the Republic. Nevertheless, the members of the military do not benefit from all public liberties, as the 13 July 1972 law on the general statute of militaries specifies.
  • Young people: The July 1974 law instituted at the instigation of the president Valéry Giscard d'Estaing reduced the coming of age to 18, which thus made some teenagers full citizens.
  • Naturalized foreigners: Since 9 January 1973, foreigners who have acquired French nationality do not have to wait five years after their naturalization to be able to vote.
  • Inhabitants of the colonies: The 7 May 1946 law stated that soldiers from the "Empire" (such as the tirailleurs) killed during World War I and World War II were not citizens.[47]

Modern Citizenship is linked to civic participation (also called positive freedom), which includes voting, demonstrations, petitions, activism, etc.[45]

Some scholars, such as Annette Joseph Gabriel, argue that citizenship is part of a colonial agenda and is not a universal practice.[48] [relevant?]

In order to create an equitable and safe space for all, she believes that there must be several different forms of belonging so that everyone feels included instead of being tied to one sole identity factor.[48] She also argues for what she calls decolonial citizenship, which is work has already been done by black women such as Suzanne Cesaire, Jane Vialle, and Paulette Nardal.[48] Although their activism fought against colonialism and fought for multiple cultural and racial identities to be noted, their ideologies were sadly overlooked and silenced.[48]

Previous law: Article 21-19(5º) edit

In 2001, as Bill Clinton finished his second term as President of the U.S. (the legal limit of terms under the U.S. Constitution), a theory was published by CNN that he could claim citizenship of France and run for leadership there.[49] The open-letter by historian Patrick Weil held that a little known "law, passed in 1961 [article 21-19(5º)], enables people from former French territories to apply for immediate naturalisation, bypassing the normal five-year residency requirement for would-be French citizens."[50] As Clinton was born in Arkansas which had been part of French Louisiana before it was sold to the US, it was held that he would qualify under this law. And as a naturalised French citizen, he could run in the French presidential election.

Clinton himself later repeated this claim in 2012 as an amusing thought when speaking to an interviewer.[51] Clinton had always dismissed the idea, and at the time of his retelling of the story in 2012, unknown to him, the possibility had already ended. This was because article 21-19(5º) of the Code civil was repealed (by article 82 of law 2006–911) on July 25, 2006, under the direction of Nicolas Sarkozy, who was then Minister of the Interior. Since "Weil's article made this provision of the French nationality law notorious, the French parliament abolished it".[52][53]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Dans quels cas un enfant est-il Français ?". www.service-public.fr.
  2. ^ a b Bertossi, Christophe (2010). European University Institute – EUDO Citizenship Observatory (ed.). "Country Report: France" (PDF).
  3. ^ "French Embassy".
  4. ^ "Le projet de loi « immigration » de Darmanin, dernier texte d'une longue série de 117 depuis 1945". Le Monde.fr (in French). 14 November 2023. Retrieved 30 November 2023.
  5. ^ "Projet de loi « immigration » : les sénateurs adoptent un texte largement remanié". www.editions-legislatives.fr (in French). 16 November 2023. Retrieved 30 November 2023.
  6. ^ Kondo 2001, pp. 2–3.
  7. ^ Bertossi & Hajjat 2013, p. 1.
  8. ^ Brubaker 1989, pp. 31–32.
  9. ^ Weil, Patrick (2002). Qu'est-ce qu'un Français ? Histoire de la nationalité française depuis la Révolution. Paris: Grasset. ISBN 978-2-246-60571-3.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i Plender, Richard (October 1974). "The New French Nationality Law". International and Comparative Law Quarterly. 23 (4): 709–715. doi:10.1093/iclqaj/23.4.709. JSTOR 758412.
  11. ^ from Charles Péguy's L'Argent
  12. ^ François Masure, "Etat et identité nationale. Un rapport ambigu à propos des naturalisés, in Journal des anthropologues, hors-série 2007, pp.39–49 (see p.48) (in French)
  13. ^ "Loi n°93-933 of 23 July 1993". legifrance.gouv.fr.
  14. ^ "Loi n° 73-42 of 9 January 1973". legifrance.gouv.fr.
  15. ^ Bertossi, Christophe (April 2010). "Report on France" (PDF). EUDO Citizenship Observatory: 7–8. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  16. ^ Bertossi, 4.
  17. ^ "Ordonnance n° 45-2441 du 19 octobre 1945 portant code de la nationalité française – Légifrance". www.legifrance.gouv.fr. Retrieved 3 March 2021. Article. 9.— Jusqu'à une date qui sera fixée par décret, et au plus tard à l'expiration du délai de cinq ans suivant la date de la cessation légale des hostilités, l'acquisition d'une nationalité étrangère par un Français du sexe masculin, âgé de moins de 50 ans, ne lui fait perdre la nationalité française qu'avec l'autorisation du Gouvernement français.
  18. ^ a b c d "Décision n° 2013-360 QPC". Cairn Info. doi:10.3917/rcdip.142.0329. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  19. ^ Bertossi, 5.
  20. ^ "Loi n° 54-395 du 9 avril 1954 modifiant l'article 9 de l'ordonnance n° 45-2441 du 19 octobre 1945 portant code de la nationalité française – Légifrance". www.legifrance.gouv.fr. Article unique. — L'article 9 de l'ordonnance n° 45-2441 du 19 octobre 1945 est modifié ainsi qu'il suit: « Art. 9. — Jusqu'à une date qui sera fixée par décret, l'acquisition d'une nationalité étrangère par un Français du sexe masculin ne lui fait perdre la nationalité française qu'avec l'autorisation du Gouvernement français. « Cette autorisation es.t de droit lorsque le demandeur a acquis une nationalité étrangère après l'âge de cinquante ans. " Les Français du sexe masculin, âgés de moins de cinquante ans, qui ont acquis une nationalité étrangère entre le 1 juin 1951 et la date d'entrée en vigueur de la présente loi, seront réputés n'avoir pas perdu la nationalité française nonobstant les termes de l'article 88 du code de la nationalité française. Ils devront, s'ils désirent perdre la nationalité française, en demander l'autorisation au Gouvernement français, conformément aux dispositions de l'article 91 dudit code. Cette autorisation est de droit ".
  21. ^ Bertossi, 7.
  22. ^ "Article 87 de l'ordonnance n° 45-2441 du 19 octobre 1945 et article 9 de l'ordonnance n° 45-2441 du 19 octobre 1945 issu de la loi n° 54-395 du 9 avril 1954". www.courdecassation.fr. Cour de cassation. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  23. ^ "2014, FEMMES : FIN D'UNE DISCRIMINATION". Français du monde – adfe – Tunisie (in French). 28 August 2018. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  24. ^ "Conséquences sur la nationalité de la décision du Conseil constitutionnel du 9 janvier 2014 – Sénat". www.senat.fr. 23 October 2014. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  25. ^ Bertossi, 17.
  26. ^ a b c "L'homme déchu de sa nationalité après avoir épousé un Néerlandais pourrait redevenir Français en 2009" (in French). Le Monde. AFP. 2 May 2008. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
  27. ^ "Services aux citoyens". France Diplomatie : : Ministère de l'Europe et des Affaires étrangères.
  28. ^ Nugent 2017, pp. 16, 32–37.
  29. ^ Lewis, Flora (20 May 1979). "Europe Gets Set to Vote; It's Not Sure About What". The New York Times. from the original on 8 April 2022. Retrieved 8 April 2022.
  30. ^ Siskind 1992, pp. 899, 906.
  31. ^ Wiener 1997, pp. 529, 544.
  32. ^ Tobler 2020, pp. 482–483.
  33. ^ Vahl & Grolimund 2006, p. 12.
  34. ^ Refugees, United Nations High Commissioner for. "Refworld | France: Whether an individual aged 18 years or older, born in a foreign country to a French mother, is of French nationality and whether they can pass on their nationality to their children, also born in a foreign country; procedures for having French nationality recognized". Refworld. Retrieved 5 December 2023.
  35. ^ Bertossi & Hajjat 2013, pp. 2, 15–16.
  36. ^ "La réforme du code de la nationalité L'application du double droit du sol dépendra du lieu de naissance des parents". Le Monde.fr (in French). 15 May 1993. Retrieved 30 December 2023.
  37. ^ Bertossi & Hajjat 2013, p. 12.
  38. ^ a b Bertossi & Hajjat 2013, p. 18.
  39. ^ Bertossi & Hajjat 2013, p. 20.
  40. ^ Bertossi & Hajjat 2013, p. 19.
  41. ^ "FAQ – Frequently Asked Questions". French Foreign Legion. Retrieved 21 November 2023.
  42. ^ Tweedie, Neil (3 December 2008). "The French Foreign Legion - the last option for those desperate to escape the UK". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 21 November 2023.
  43. ^ Bertossi & Hajjat 2013, pp. 19–21.
  44. ^ "Être né en France d'un parent immigré – Insee Première – 1634". www.insee.fr. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  45. ^ a b Simon, Patrick (May 2012). "French National Identity and Integration: Who Belongs to the National Community?" (PDF). Institut national d'études démographiques (INED).
  46. ^ Loi no 2000-493 du 6 juin 2000 tendant à favoriser l'égal accès des femmes et des hommes aux mandats électoraux et fonctions électives (in French)
  47. ^ B. Villalba. (in French). Catholic University of Lille, Law Department. Archived from the original on 16 November 2006. Retrieved 3 May 2006.
  48. ^ a b c d Joseph-Gabriel, Annette K., Reimagining Liberation: How Black Women Transformed Citizenship In the French Empire.
  49. ^ Weil, Patrick (22 May 2018). "Bill Clinton: The French Years". The New York Times.
  50. ^ "Goodbye White House...bonjour Paris?". CNN. 17 January 2001.
  51. ^ Grace Wyler (26 September 2012). "Bill Clinton Has Figured Out How He Could Be President Again".
  52. ^ Joshua Keating Wednesday (26 September 2012). "Sorry, Bill Clinton. You can't be president of France or Ireland".
  53. ^ "No, Bill Clinton Can't Run for the French Presidency". 11 March 2013.

General sources edit

  • Bertossi, Christophe; Hajjat, Abdellali (January 2013). Country report: France (Report). European University Institute. hdl:1814/19613.
  • Brubaker, William Rogers (1989). "The French Revolution and the Invention of Citizenship". French Politics and Society. 7 (3). Berghahn Books: 30–49. JSTOR 42844105.
  • Kondo, Atsushi, ed. (2001). Citizenship in a Global World. Palgrave Macmillan. doi:10.1057/9780333993880. ISBN 978-0-333-80266-3.
  • Nugent, Neill (2017). The Government and Politics of the European Union (8th ed.). Macmillan Publishers. ISBN 978-1-137-45409-6.
  • Siskind, Gregory (1992). "Freedom of Movement for Lawyers in the New Europe". The International Lawyer. 26 (4). American Bar Association: 899–931. JSTOR 40707010.
  • Tobler, Christa (2020). "Free Movement of Persons in the EU v. in the EEA: of Effect-Related Homogeneity and a Reversed Polydor Principle". In Cambien, Nathan; Kochenov, Dimitry; Muir, Elise (eds.). European Citizenship under Stress: Social Justice, Brexit and Other Challenges. Brill. pp. 482–507. ISBN 978-90-04-42245-2. JSTOR 10.1163/j.ctv2gjwnvm.25.
  • Vahl, Marius; Grolimund, Nina (2006). Integration Without Membership: Switzerland's Bilateral Agreements with the European Union (PDF). Centre for European Policy Studies. ISBN 92-9079-616-2. (PDF) from the original on 18 May 2022. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
  • Wiener, Antje (August 1997). "Making Sense of the New Geography of Citizenship: Fragmented Citizenship in the European Union". Theory and Society. 26 (4). Springer: 529–560. doi:10.1023/A:1006809913519. JSTOR 657860. S2CID 189868416.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • French government self-check tool for citizenship requirements

french, nationality, historically, based, principles, soli, latin, right, soil, sanguinis, according, ernest, renan, definition, opposition, german, definition, nationality, sanguinis, latin, right, blood, formalised, johann, gottlieb, fichte, civil, code, fre. French nationality law is historically based on the principles of jus soli Latin for right of soil and jus sanguinis 1 according to Ernest Renan s definition in opposition to the German definition of nationality jus sanguinis Latin for right of blood formalised by Johann Gottlieb Fichte Civil Code of the FrenchArticles 17 to 33 2Code civil des FrancaisFrench ParliamentCitationArt 17 33 2 C civTerritorial extentFranceEnacted byFrench ParliamentEnacted22 July 1993Commenced22 July 1993Status Amended The 1993 Mehaignerie Law which was part of a broader immigration control agenda to restrict access to French nationality and increase the focus on jus sanguinis as the nationality determinant for children born in France 2 required children born in France of foreign parents to request French nationality between age 16 and age 21 rather than being automatically accorded citizenship at majority This manifestation of will requirement was subsequently abrogated by the Guigou Law of 1998 3 but children born in France of foreign parents remain foreign until obtaining legal majority Children born in France to tourists or other short term visitors do not acquire French nationality by virtue of birth in France residency must be proven Since immigration became increasingly a political theme in the 1980s both left wing and right wing governments have issued several laws restricting the possibilities of access to French nationality 4 5 Contents 1 Terminology 2 History 2 1 19th century 2 1 1 Third Republic 2 2 20th century 2 3 Denaturalization 2 4 Multiple citizenship 2 5 European integration 3 Acquisition and loss of nationality 3 1 Entitlement by birth descent or residence as a child 3 2 Voluntary acquisition 3 3 Loss and resumption 4 French citizenship and identity 4 1 Rights and obligations of French citizens 5 Previous law Article 21 19 5º 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 General sources 8 Bibliography 9 External linksTerminology editThe distinction between the meaning of the terms citizenship and nationality is not always clear in the English language and differs by country Generally nationality refers to a person s legal belonging to a sovereign state and is the common term used in international treaties when addressing members of a country while citizenship usually means the set of rights and duties a person has in that nation 6 Historically French nationals held differing sets of civil and political rights depending on their religion ethnicity economic standing and sex The right to vote in French elections did not extend to women foreigners who naturalised as French nationals colonial subjects persons who were not required to pay property taxes and members of non Christian faiths In this way not all French nationals were necessarily full citizens 7 History editIn the society of the Ancien Regime the rights of an individual depended on which social class they belonged to The primary factor determining the privileges and obligations a person had was whether they were part of the nobility clergy or a higher socioeconomic level of the Third Estate Foreigners who were not French subjects traditionally could not pass property to their descendants the droit d aubaine right of windfall allowed the sovereign to confiscate the property of a resident alien in the event of their death This confiscation became gradually less frequent through the early modern period with an increasing amount of exceptions granted to foreign merchants to encourage their immigration into the country France later negotiated treaties with many European states that exempted their subjects from this tax on a reciprocal basis in the latter half of the 18th century 8 French nationality and citizenship were concepts that existed even before the French Revolution loosely based on the premise that people spoke the same language within specific institutional frameworks 9 Afterward in the late 1700s and early 1800s France was fairly unique among countries in tying its nationality laws to its election laws and working to increase the joint ambit of citizenship and the right of the franchise 10 19th century edit There are three key dates in the legal history of naturalization Naturalization Year Event 1804 Civil Code which allowed the possibility of naturalization 1851 third generation immigrants those with one parent born on French soil were allowed to naturalize 1889 second generation immigrants those born on French soil were allowed to naturalize once they reached the age of majority Soon after the approval of the French constitutions statesman Jean Jacques Regis de Cambaceres drafted and presented a new civil code that would unify private law including nationality law and with application for all French citizens outside of France 10 Third Republic edit Military service and state education were two processes central to the creation of a common national culture Military conscription universal from 1872 in theory if not in practice brought inhabitants of the state s regions together for the first time creating bonds of friendship and encouraging the use of French rather than regional languages Universal education the aim of the Jules Ferry Laws 1879 1886 brought the whole of the population into contact with state sanctioned version of French history and identity State teachers the Black hussars of the Republic 11 conveyed the national language to the people of the regions In a series of expansions in the late 1800s French nationality law was liberalized for great conferment of French citizenship partly with an eye to increasing French military ranks 10 These included re introduction of simple jus soli at first with a right of the person to repudiate French citizenship but that right was later removed elimination of the loss of citizenship when emigrating from France and repeal of the loss of citizenship by a French woman on marriage to a foreigner when she did not automatically obtain her husband s citizenship 10 20th century edit In 1927 French nationality law was further loosened to increase naturalization so as to attract a larger work force for French industry 10 The measure also extracted the nationality law from the French civil code and made it an independent text as it had grown too large and unwieldy 10 Legislation in 1934 motivated by xenophobia imposed burdens on naturalized citizens and provided the government powers to forfeit citizenship which the Nazi collaborator Vichy regime used widely 10 A 1945 post war measure promulgated a comprehensive nationality code that established very lengthy and detailed rules to shield citizens from government whimsy 10 Amendments were by legislation in 1962 and by constitutions in 1946 and 1958 with the latter creating the status of citoyen de la Communaute vaguely akin to the British status of Citizen of the United Kingdom and Colonies established by the British Nationality Act 1948 10 The 1993 law that attempted to restrict conferral of French citizenship also transferred the contents of the Code de la Nationalite Francaise back into the Code Civil where they had existed from 1803 until 1927 2 Denaturalization edit According to Giorgio Agamben France was one of the first European countries to pass denaturalization laws in 1915 with regard to naturalized citizens of enemy origins Its example was followed by most European countries As early as July 1940 Vichy France set up a special Commission charged with reviewing the naturalizations granted since the 1927 reform citation needed of the nationality law Between June 1940 and August 1944 15 000 persons mostly Jews were denaturalized 12 This bureaucratic designation was instrumental in their subsequent internment and murder Multiple citizenship edit Multiple citizenship was officially recognized for both men and women on 9 January 1973 since then possession of more than one nationality does not affect French nationality 13 14 Before 19 October 1945 multiple nationality was prohibited and any French national who acquired another nationality before that day automatically lost French nationality unless they were male nationals under the obligation of military service and did not seek the release of their French nationality by decree 15 Until 1927 women who married a non French national were also clarification needed subject to the automatic loss of nationality if they acquired their husbands nationalities upon marriage 16 The 1945 French Nationality Code ordonnance n 45 2441 added a provision to indicate that for a maximum period of 5 years following the legal cessation of hostilities the permission for the loss of nationality must be sought from the French government if the person was male and under the age of 50 17 The transitional period was deemed to have ended on 1 June 1951 18 Also the new code specified that a woman would lose her French nationality only when she declared that she did not want to remain French after marriage 19 The 1954 amendment to the Nationality Code loi n 54 395 removed the five year period and retroactively from 1 June 1951 no male national of France under the age of 50 would be subject to the automatic loss provision section 87 of the 1945 Nationality Code without the specific permission from the French government 20 This limited the automatic loss of nationality to men over 50 and women as the permissions to lose French nationality were automatically given to them upon their naturalizations 21 18 In 2013 a woman who lost her French nationality under section 87 appealed to the Constitutional Council which found the provision to be unconstitutional under the 1946 Constitution and the 1789 Declaration and ordered the reinstatement of her nationality 22 18 23 As a result of this decision all women who lost their nationality between 1951 and 1973 solely under section 87 may voluntarily request for the reinstatement of their nationality by invoking this decision and their descendants would also be able to invoke this decision if their female ancestors have done so 18 24 Since 1973 dual nationality has been legalized for all French nationals although a person might still be deprived of their French nationality under bilateral or multilateral treaties or agreements France concluded with other countries 25 In 2007 the Ministry of Justice concluded that a French male residing in the Netherlands and naturalized as a Dutch national in 2006 based on his marriage to a Dutch man lost his French nationality upon naturalization because a 1985 agreement between France and the Netherlands stipulated that any national of either country who acquired the other country s nationality would cease to be a national of their country of origin 26 A provision in the agreement provided exemptions for married couples but as France did not recognize same sex marriage in 2006 it was deemed to be not applicable to him as he was not considered to be married under French law 26 Due to the case which sparked national outrage the Sarkozy administration announced that it would be taking steps to denounce some portions in the agreements with the Netherlands and other countries in 2009 26 France later denounced Chapter I of the Council of Europe s Convention on the Reduction of Cases of Multiple Nationality and on Military Obligations in Cases of Multiple Nationality of May 6 1963 The denunciation took effect on March 5 2009 27 European integration edit See also European Union citizenship French involvement in European integration began in the immediate post war period of the late 1940s Initial cooperation was focused on the economy through the Organisation for European Economic Co operation as a condition for receiving aid from the United States provided by the Marshall Plan The post war political situation created the circumstances that facilitated the establishment of further organisations to integrate Western Europe along common social and security policies France became a founding member of the European Communities EC in 1951 a set of organisations that eventually developed into the European Union EU 28 French citizens participated in their first European Parliament elections in 1979 29 and have been able to work in other EC EU countries under the freedom of movement for workers established by the 1957 Treaty of Rome 30 With the creation of European Union citizenship by the 1992 Maastrict Treaty free movement rights were extended to all nationals of EU member states regardless of their employment status 31 The scope of these rights was further expanded with the establishment of the European Economic Area in 1994 to include any national of an EFTA member state except for Switzerland 32 which concluded a separate free movement agreement with the EU that came into force in 2002 33 Acquisition and loss of nationality editEntitlement by birth descent or residence as a child edit All persons born within the country to at least one French national or foreign parent who themself was born in France automatically receive French nationality at birth All persons born abroad to at least one French parent are automatically French from birth 34 French nationality can be continually transmitted through each generation born abroad provided that each subsequent generational birth is registered Abandoned children found in France with unclear parentage and any other children born in the country who would otherwise be stateless are granted French nationality 35 Individuals born in France on or before 31 December 1993 automatically acquired French nationality at birth if at least one parent was born in former French colonies prior to independence 36 Since that date only children of Algerians born in French Algeria who were resident in metropolitan France for at least five years on or before 2 July 1962 have been able to automatically acquire French nationality at birth 37 Children born in France to foreign parents born overseas are automatically granted French nationality at age 18 if they are domiciled in France and have been resident in the country for at least five years since age 11 38 Those under age 16 who were born in the country and resident in France at age eight are eligible for French nationality by declaration executed on their behalf by their parents an eligible child s explicit consent to acquire nationality is required after age 13 39 Voluntary acquisition edit Foreigners over age 18 may naturalise as French nationals at the discretion of the government after residing in the country for at least five years Applicants must hold no criminal record and demonstrate that they have sufficiently assimilated to the French community typically by becoming proficient in the French language and confirming knowledge in national republican values Candidates who are married or have children must provide evidence of their domicile in France in addition to their own The five year residence requirement may be exceptionally waived for foreign nationals enlisted in the French Armed Forces injured in active combat and any person considered to have made an extraordinary cultural or economic contribution to the French state 40 Alternatively members of the French Foreign Legion may apply for naturalisation after three years of service 41 42 Noncitizens married to French nationals are eligible to acquire nationality by declaration after four years of marriage and cohabitation Couples married overseas must re register their marriage in the French civil register 38 Loss and resumption edit French nationality can be relinquished by making a declaration of renunciation provided that the declarant ordinarily resides overseas and already possesses another nationality Former French nationals may subsequently apply to reacquire French nationality Persons convicted of serious crimes such as terrorism or espionage may be stripped of their nationality within 10 years of their naturalisation 43 French citizenship and identity editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message According to the French Republic the French people are those who are in possession of French nationality According to the French Constitution France shall be an indivisible secular democratic and social Republic It shall ensure the equality of all citizens before the law without distinction of origin race or religion It shall respect all beliefs It shall be organised on a decentralised basis Article 1 Archived 13 March 2013 at the Wayback MachineSince the middle of the 19th century France has exhibited a very high rate of immigration mainly from Southern Europe Eastern Europe the Maghreb Africa and Asia According to a 2004 report by INED researcher Michele Tribalat France has approximately 14 million persons out of nearly 63 million or approximately 22 see demographics of France of foreign ascendancy immigrants or with at least one parent or grandparent immigrant In 2015 7 3 million people born in France had at least one immigrant parent roughly 11 of the population The origin of the descendants of immigrants reflects the immigration flows that France has experienced for over a century 44 The absence of official statistics on French citizens of foreign origin is deliberate Under French law passed after the Vichy regime it is forbidden to categorize people according to their ethnic origins In France like in many other European countries censuses do not collect information on supposed ancestry Moreover all French statistics are forbidden to have any references concerning ethnic membership Thus the French government s assimilationist stance towards immigration as well as towards regional identities and cultures together with the political heritage of the French Revolution has led to the development of a French identity which is based more on the notion of citizenship than on cultural historical or ethnic ties 45 For that reason French identity must not necessarily be associated with the ethnic French people but can be associated with either a nationality and citizenship or a culture and language based group The latter forms the basis for La Francophonie a group of French speaking countries or countries with historical and cultural association to France The concept of French ethnicity exists outside France s borders in particular in Quebec where some people claim membership to a French ethnic group but again many view it as not so much ethnicity based as language based and would also include immigrants from for example Lebanon and Haiti France s particular self perception means that French identity may include a naturalized French speaking ethnic Portuguese Italian Spaniard Pole Romanian Lebanese Vietnamese Tunisian Algerian or Moroccan Nonetheless like in other European countries some level of discrimination occurs and there are higher unemployment rates among job seekers with foreign sounding names Rights and obligations of French citizens edit In modern France in general the rights are fundamentally the same as those in other EU countries Despite the official discourse of universality French nationality has not meant automatic citizenship Some categories of French people have been excluded throughout the years from full citizenship Women Until the Liberation they were deprived of the right to vote The provisional government of General de Gaulle accorded them this right by the 21 April 1944 prescription 46 Military For a long time the military was called the Grande muette The Big Mute in reference to its prohibition against interfering in political life During a large part of the Third Republic 1871 1940 the Army was in the main anti republican and thus counterrevolutionary the Dreyfus Affair and the 16 May 1877 crisis that led to a monarchist coup d etat by MacMahon being examples of this anti republican spirit That character of the military would make them gain the right to vote only after the 17 August 1945 prescription the contribution of De Gaulle to the interior French Resistance which reconciled the Army with the Republic Nevertheless the members of the military do not benefit from all public liberties as the 13 July 1972 law on the general statute of militaries specifies Young people The July 1974 law instituted at the instigation of the president Valery Giscard d Estaing reduced the coming of age to 18 which thus made some teenagers full citizens Naturalized foreigners Since 9 January 1973 foreigners who have acquired French nationality do not have to wait five years after their naturalization to be able to vote Inhabitants of the colonies The 7 May 1946 law stated that soldiers from the Empire such as the tirailleurs killed during World War I and World War II were not citizens 47 Modern Citizenship is linked to civic participation also called positive freedom which includes voting demonstrations petitions activism etc 45 Some scholars such as Annette Joseph Gabriel argue that citizenship is part of a colonial agenda and is not a universal practice 48 relevant This section may contain material not related to the topic of the article Please help improve this section or discuss this issue on the talk page March 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message In order to create an equitable and safe space for all she believes that there must be several different forms of belonging so that everyone feels included instead of being tied to one sole identity factor 48 She also argues for what she calls decolonial citizenship which is work has already been done by black women such as Suzanne Cesaire Jane Vialle and Paulette Nardal 48 Although their activism fought against colonialism and fought for multiple cultural and racial identities to be noted their ideologies were sadly overlooked and silenced 48 Previous law Article 21 19 5º editIn 2001 as Bill Clinton finished his second term as President of the U S the legal limit of terms under the U S Constitution a theory was published by CNN that he could claim citizenship of France and run for leadership there 49 The open letter by historian Patrick Weil held that a little known law passed in 1961 article 21 19 5º enables people from former French territories to apply for immediate naturalisation bypassing the normal five year residency requirement for would be French citizens 50 As Clinton was born in Arkansas which had been part of French Louisiana before it was sold to the US it was held that he would qualify under this law And as a naturalised French citizen he could run in the French presidential election Clinton himself later repeated this claim in 2012 as an amusing thought when speaking to an interviewer 51 Clinton had always dismissed the idea and at the time of his retelling of the story in 2012 unknown to him the possibility had already ended This was because article 21 19 5º of the Code civil was repealed by article 82 of law 2006 911 on July 25 2006 under the direction of Nicolas Sarkozy who was then Minister of the Interior Since Weil s article made this provision of the French nationality law notorious the French parliament abolished it 52 53 See also editList of people granted honorary French citizenship during the French Revolution Visa policy of France Visa requirements for French citizensReferences editCitations edit Dans quels cas un enfant est il Francais www service public fr a b Bertossi Christophe 2010 European University Institute EUDO Citizenship Observatory ed Country Report France PDF French Embassy Le projet de loi immigration de Darmanin dernier texte d une longue serie de 117 depuis 1945 Le Monde fr in French 14 November 2023 Retrieved 30 November 2023 Projet de loi immigration les senateurs adoptent un texte largement remanie www editions legislatives fr in French 16 November 2023 Retrieved 30 November 2023 Kondo 2001 pp 2 3 Bertossi amp Hajjat 2013 p 1 Brubaker 1989 pp 31 32 Weil Patrick 2002 Qu est ce qu un Francais Histoire de la nationalite francaise depuis la Revolution Paris Grasset ISBN 978 2 246 60571 3 a b c d e f g h i Plender Richard October 1974 The New French Nationality Law International and Comparative Law Quarterly 23 4 709 715 doi 10 1093 iclqaj 23 4 709 JSTOR 758412 from Charles Peguy s L Argent Francois Masure Etat et identite nationale Un rapport ambigu a propos des naturalises in Journal des anthropologues hors serie 2007 pp 39 49 see p 48 in French Loi n 93 933 of 23 July 1993 legifrance gouv fr Loi n 73 42 of 9 January 1973 legifrance gouv fr Bertossi Christophe April 2010 Report on France PDF EUDO Citizenship Observatory 7 8 Retrieved 5 March 2021 Bertossi 4 Ordonnance n 45 2441 du 19 octobre 1945 portant code de la nationalite francaise Legifrance www legifrance gouv fr Retrieved 3 March 2021 Article 9 Jusqu a une date qui sera fixee par decret et au plus tard a l expiration du delai de cinq ans suivant la date de la cessation legale des hostilites l acquisition d une nationalite etrangere par un Francais du sexe masculin age de moins de 50 ans ne lui fait perdre la nationalite francaise qu avec l autorisation du Gouvernement francais a b c d Decision n 2013 360 QPC Cairn Info doi 10 3917 rcdip 142 0329 Retrieved 5 March 2021 Bertossi 5 Loi n 54 395 du 9 avril 1954 modifiant l article 9 de l ordonnance n 45 2441 du 19 octobre 1945 portant code de la nationalite francaise Legifrance www legifrance gouv fr Article unique L article 9 de l ordonnance n 45 2441 du 19 octobre 1945 est modifie ainsi qu il suit Art 9 Jusqu a une date qui sera fixee par decret l acquisition d une nationalite etrangere par un Francais du sexe masculin ne lui fait perdre la nationalite francaise qu avec l autorisation du Gouvernement francais Cette autorisation es t de droit lorsque le demandeur a acquis une nationalite etrangere apres l age de cinquante ans Les Francais du sexe masculin ages de moins de cinquante ans qui ont acquis une nationalite etrangere entre le 1 juin 1951 et la date d entree en vigueur de la presente loi seront reputes n avoir pas perdu la nationalite francaise nonobstant les termes de l article 88 du code de la nationalite francaise Ils devront s ils desirent perdre la nationalite francaise en demander l autorisation au Gouvernement francais conformement aux dispositions de l article 91 dudit code Cette autorisation est de droit Bertossi 7 Article 87 de l ordonnance n 45 2441 du 19 octobre 1945 et article 9 de l ordonnance n 45 2441 du 19 octobre 1945 issu de la loi n 54 395 du 9 avril 1954 www courdecassation fr Cour de cassation Retrieved 5 March 2021 2014 FEMMES FIN D UNE DISCRIMINATION Francais du monde adfe Tunisie in French 28 August 2018 Retrieved 5 March 2021 Consequences sur la nationalite de la decision du Conseil constitutionnel du 9 janvier 2014 Senat www senat fr 23 October 2014 Retrieved 5 March 2021 Bertossi 17 a b c L homme dechu de sa nationalite apres avoir epouse un Neerlandais pourrait redevenir Francais en 2009 in French Le Monde AFP 2 May 2008 Retrieved 5 March 2021 Services aux citoyens France Diplomatie Ministere de l Europe et des Affaires etrangeres Nugent 2017 pp 16 32 37 Lewis Flora 20 May 1979 Europe Gets Set to Vote It s Not Sure About What The New York Times Archived from the original on 8 April 2022 Retrieved 8 April 2022 Siskind 1992 pp 899 906 Wiener 1997 pp 529 544 Tobler 2020 pp 482 483 Vahl amp Grolimund 2006 p 12 Refugees United Nations High Commissioner for Refworld France Whether an individual aged 18 years or older born in a foreign country to a French mother is of French nationality and whether they can pass on their nationality to their children also born in a foreign country procedures for having French nationality recognized Refworld Retrieved 5 December 2023 Bertossi amp Hajjat 2013 pp 2 15 16 La reforme du code de la nationalite L application du double droit du sol dependra du lieu de naissance des parents Le Monde fr in French 15 May 1993 Retrieved 30 December 2023 Bertossi amp Hajjat 2013 p 12 a b Bertossi amp Hajjat 2013 p 18 Bertossi amp Hajjat 2013 p 20 Bertossi amp Hajjat 2013 p 19 FAQ Frequently Asked Questions French Foreign Legion Retrieved 21 November 2023 Tweedie Neil 3 December 2008 The French Foreign Legion the last option for those desperate to escape the UK The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 21 November 2023 Bertossi amp Hajjat 2013 pp 19 21 Etre ne en France d un parent immigre Insee Premiere 1634 www insee fr Retrieved 24 May 2022 a b Simon Patrick May 2012 French National Identity and Integration Who Belongs to the National Community PDF Institut national d etudes demographiques INED Loi no 2000 493 du 6 juin 2000 tendant a favoriser l egal acces des femmes et des hommes aux mandats electoraux et fonctions electives in French B Villalba Chapitre 2 Les incertitudes de la citoyennete in French Catholic University of Lille Law Department Archived from the original on 16 November 2006 Retrieved 3 May 2006 a b c d Joseph Gabriel Annette K Reimagining Liberation How Black Women Transformed Citizenship In the French Empire Weil Patrick 22 May 2018 Bill Clinton The French Years The New York Times Goodbye White House bonjour Paris CNN 17 January 2001 Grace Wyler 26 September 2012 Bill Clinton Has Figured Out How He Could Be President Again Joshua Keating Wednesday 26 September 2012 Sorry Bill Clinton You can t be president of France or Ireland No Bill Clinton Can t Run for the French Presidency 11 March 2013 General sources edit Bertossi Christophe Hajjat Abdellali January 2013 Country report France Report European University Institute hdl 1814 19613 Brubaker William Rogers 1989 The French Revolution and the Invention of Citizenship French Politics and Society 7 3 Berghahn Books 30 49 JSTOR 42844105 Kondo Atsushi ed 2001 Citizenship in a Global World Palgrave Macmillan doi 10 1057 9780333993880 ISBN 978 0 333 80266 3 Nugent Neill 2017 The Government and Politics of the European Union 8th ed Macmillan Publishers ISBN 978 1 137 45409 6 Siskind Gregory 1992 Freedom of Movement for Lawyers in the New Europe The International Lawyer 26 4 American Bar Association 899 931 JSTOR 40707010 Tobler Christa 2020 Free Movement of Persons in the EU v in the EEA of Effect Related Homogeneity and a Reversed Polydor Principle In Cambien Nathan Kochenov Dimitry Muir Elise eds European Citizenship under Stress Social Justice Brexit and Other Challenges Brill pp 482 507 ISBN 978 90 04 42245 2 JSTOR 10 1163 j ctv2gjwnvm 25 Vahl Marius Grolimund Nina 2006 Integration Without Membership Switzerland s Bilateral Agreements with the European Union PDF Centre for European Policy Studies ISBN 92 9079 616 2 Archived PDF from the original on 18 May 2022 Retrieved 25 February 2023 Wiener Antje August 1997 Making Sense of the New Geography of Citizenship Fragmented Citizenship in the European Union Theory and Society 26 4 Springer 529 560 doi 10 1023 A 1006809913519 JSTOR 657860 S2CID 189868416 Bibliography editCitizenship and Nationhood in France and Germany by Rogers Brubaker Harvard University Press 1992 ISBN 0 674 13177 0 Peasants Into Frenchmen The Modernization of Rural France 1870 1914 by Eugen Weber Chatto and Windus 1977 ISBN 0 7011 2210 2External links editFrench government self check tool for citizenship requirements Portals nbsp France nbsp European Union Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title French nationality law amp oldid 1219682205, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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