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Immigration, family norms and citizenship in the Netherlands

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Title: Immigration, family norms and citizenship in the Netherlands


1
Immigration, family norms and citizenship in the
Netherlands
2
  • S. van Walsum
  • Family norms and citizenship in the Netherlands
  • (published in Christiane Harzig Danielle
    Juteau (eds) The Social Construction of
    Diversity. Recasting the Master Narrative of
    Industrial Nations. Berghahn Books, New
    York/Oxford, 2003, pp. 212-226)

3
Why the family?
  • Long term residence is condition for acquiring
    Dutch citizenship
  • Family re-unification is one of the major grounds
    for granting long-term residence status and in
    the end
  • citizenship

4
Family norms underpinning Dutch immigration rules
  • Monogamy
  • Full time provider as head of household
  • Economically dependent full time caring parent
  • Yet, these same norms have been challenged in
    Dutch family law.

5
Structure of the lecture
  • The integration of women in the body politic
  • The family in contemporary Dutch law
  • Family norms in Dutch family reunification
    policies the Tuquabo-Tekle case
  • The integration of immigrants into the body
    politic

6
Family norms and Dutch citizenship in 19th
century the integration of women into the body
politic
  • Nuclear family model seen as traditional
  • Yet product of intense political conflict over
  • Womens role in society
  • Enfranchisement

7
  • Steinmetz
  • The family not as a pre-social private bond
    between men, women and children, but
  • Family as the foundation of the nation state and
    therefore family law, regulating the family, as
    public law.

8
The family in contemporary Dutch law
  • 1986 parents not living together should be
    treated equally to parents living together
  • 1989 A married man may recognize his child born
    out of wedlock
  • 1995 Parental authority over children of minor
    age a. Right of contact is made into a
    fundamental right b. Unmarried and divorced
    parents can ask for shared parental authority
  • 1998 divorced and unmarried parents automatically
    share parental authority
  • 1998 broadening possibilities for the natual
    father to recognize the child without consent
    mother.

9
Autonomy, but ....
  • Some inconsistencies
  • Students are autonomous individuals gt
    living-allowance, yet so low students from
    poorer families must stay home
  • Share a household with another adult you are
    expected to support each other, regardless of the
    nature of the relationship

10
Some are more equal than others
  • Fathers have a right to share parental power and
    to enjoy visiting rights, without having to prove
    any active involvement in the day-to-day care -
    or even the financial support - of the child
  • No full access to parental rights for the
    homosexual partner of a child's biological parent

11
Family norms in Dutch family reunification
policies
  • TUQUABO-TEKLE AND OTHERS v. THE NETHERLANDS
  • EHRM 1 dec. 2005
  • www.worldlii.org/eu/cases/ECHR/2005/803.html

12
Art 8 ERHC
  • 1. Everyone has the right to respect for his ...
    family life ...
  • 2.  There shall be no interference by a public
    authority with the exercise of this right except
    such as is in accordance with the law and is
    necessary in a democratic society in the interest
    of national security, public order or economic
    welfare, for the prevention of disorder or crime,
    the protection of health or good customs or the
    protection of the rights and freedoms of others

13
  • 1989 mother of Mehret flees from Ethiopia to
    Norway. Leaves Mehret behind with family in
    nowadays Eritrea
  • 1991mother receives residence permit on
    humanitarian grounds, because of situation in
    Eritrea she is not able to bring Mehret to Norway
  • 1992 mother marries Etheopian refugee in Nl.
    Together they get 2 children
  • 1997 they ask for Mehret to be admitted. She is
    then 15 years old. Request rejected.
  • 2000 appeal rejected by the Regional court

14
Relevant domestic law
  • Actually belonging to the family unit gt close
    family ties
  • The burden of proving that the close family ties
    between parent and child have not been severed
    lies with the parent residing in the Netherlands.
    The longer the parent and child have been
    separated, the heavier the burden of proof on the
    person in the Netherlands becomes.

15
  • What about the circumstances that Mehret would be
    taken from school in order to marry
  •  According to the Government, the circumstances
    of Mehret having reached marriageable age and
    facing the risk of being married off without
    being allowed to continue her schooling were not
    so exceptional that the right to respect for
    family life gave rise to a positive obligation to
    allow her to reside in the Netherlands. This
    decision did not in any way prevent
    Mrs Tuquabo-Tekle from continuing family life in
    the same way and at the same level as in the
    seven years between her departure from Eritrea
    and the time of the visa application.

16
  • ECHR on the circumstances that Mehret would be
    taken from school in order to marry
  •  Although Mrs Tuquabo-Tekle disagreed with the
    choices made for Mehret, she was unable to do
    anything about them as long as her daughter was
    living in Eritrea. The Court agrees with the
    Government that the applicants arguments in this
    context do not, by themselves, warrant the
    conclusion that the State is under a positive
    obligation to allow Mehret to reside in the
    Netherlands. Even so ... the Court accepts ...
    that Mehrets age ... should (not) lead to
    rejection of the application.

17
The ruling of the European court
  • the respondent State has failed to strike a fair
    balance between the applicants interests on the
    one hand and its own interest in controlling
    immigration on the other.
  • Accordingly, there has been a violation of
    Article 8 of the Convention.
  • Mehret may enter Nl.

18
Admission children (old policy)
  • Factual family ties. These are believed to have
    ceased to exist when
  • The child was on a (semi)permanent basis living
    in another family
  • Plus
  • The parent in Nl. did not financially maintain
    the child and/or did not actually exercise
    parental authority

19
Admission children (new policy)
  • Separation parent-child lt 5 years, tie intact,
    unless
  • Child is living on its own
  • Child has started its own family
  • (fact that child herself has a child does not
    imply that family tie is broken)
  • Separation parent-child gt 5 years family tie
    ceased to exist, unless
  • No acceptable future in country of origin
  • Child was in war situation untraceable
  • Burden of proof with parents

20
  • The contradictions of family re-unification
  • to qualify for family re-unification parents must
    find adequate housing, adequate means of
    existence
  • Yet a true mother does not delegate caring
    responsibilities

21
The integration of immigrants into the Dutch body
politic
  • Continuation of residence permit is dependent on
    either permanent attachment to Dutch partner or
    Dutch employer gt
  • Either you are a dependent spouse or a full time
    breadwinner

22
Summary
  • European countries have a restrictive immigration
    policy, yet justification for restricting
    immigration is for a liberal state not easily
    formulated.
  • One argument open borders are incompatible with
    an extensive welfare state.
  • As fully closed borders are not desirable, or
    even attainable, we need to develop creative
    solutions. Differentiated citizenship rights?
  • Immigration rules are not gender neutral. Mixed
    marriages Dutch women are subjected to screening
    of their motives more often then men different
    discourses operating the foolhardy woman versus
    the big softy alias white knight.
  • the rules on family-reunification are underpinned
    by traditional gendered norms about family life
    (monogamy, a full-time provider as head of the
    household and an economically dependent full-time
    caring parent).
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