Citizenship Studies
Volume 14, Issue 5, 2010, Pages 573-588

Legality and (dis)membership: Removal of citizenship and the creation of 'virtual immigrants' in the 1967 Israeli occupied territories (Article)

Kawar L.*
  • a Department of Politics, Bates College, Lewiston, ME 04240, United States

Abstract

This article seeks to show that liberal law continues to justify and legitimize displacements of minority populations, even in an age of universal human rights. As demonstrated by the Israeli court's 1988 decision legitimating the deportation of Mubarak Awad, citizenship and immigration laws provide juridical justifications for contemporary ethno-national settler projects. In the aftermath of a territorial conflict that defines or redefines the bounds of the state, native minority populations are vulnerable to being legally recast as 'aliens' or 'virtual immigrants'. National conflict may thus be transformed by legal formalism into a question of immigration law, allowing the power relations that produce state sovereignty to slip into the background. © 2010 Taylor & Francis.

Author Keywords

Legal Unmaking citizenship Legal status

Index Keywords

immigration policy legal rights liberalism immigrant territorial dispute Israel citizenship human rights

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-78049521586&doi=10.1080%2f13621025.2010.506716&partnerID=40&md5=46b469124e182495658e481b86016a47

DOI: 10.1080/13621025.2010.506716
ISSN: 13621025
Original Language: English