Theodora Kostakopoulou
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New horizons, old constraints and the Amsterdam compromise
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Citizenship features centrally in the quest for new transnational structures which turn 'aliens' into associates in a common venture aiming at ensuring peace, prosperity and the effective protection of rights. Multiple citizenship does not simply allow for multiple standards of citizenship and institutional pluralism. It divides sovereignty and renders the various citizenships more complex. Community law has not only diluted the link between the possession of state nationality and the enjoyment of citizenship rights, but also changed the ways in which individuals citizens view their own governments. The 1996 IGC which culminated in the Treaty of Amsterdam did not extend the personal scope of Union citizenship to long-term resident third-country nationals. It merely conferred on them the right to visa-free travel throughout the Member States for three months. The extension of the powers of the European Parliament at Amsterdam might also contribute to the flourishing of a European civil society.

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