European Citizenship after Brexit: Freedom of Movement and Rights of Residence
The Status of European Citizenship: An OverviewEU Citizenship: A Brief HistoryThe BackgroundA Farewell to Traditional International LawThe Derivative Character of Union CitizenshipEntitlements Connected to the StatusConclusionNotesReferencesA Sudden Loss of RightsThe Home Office’s New WorkloadFrom Expat to Post-EuropeanNotesReferencesUnderstanding Citizenship: The Functionalist ApproachFour Arguments in Favour of TheoryApplying Citizenship Theory to BrexitThe Functionalist TheoryHow Can it be Applied to Brexit?NotesReferencesCan Rights Be Frozen?Lessons from International LawDuty to Negotiate SolutionsDuty to InformRight to OptionSaving Citizens’ Rights?The Kuric DoctrineResidence Rights in the EUThe Wrong Saviour?NotesReferencesWho Gets to Withdraw the Status?Who Gets to Withdraw Union Citizenship?Limits of Public International LawEU Law Limits to State DiscretionResisting TemptationConsequences for the UKConsequences for Member StatesTo Challenge Loss of StatusEnacting Union CitizenshipNotesReferencesTowards a Functionalist Reading of Union Citizenship