Nation and Citizenship from the Late Nineteenth Century Onwards : A Comparative European Perspective

Grinnanailís 15-04-2008

This note was presented by the authors for a workshop organised by the Committee on Constitutional Affairs on 26/27 March 2008. Citizenship has been an element of the legal systems of all European states since the second half of the nineteenth century. In some of them it has existed for many centuries. As a legal institution, it thus originates with the modern state and has links with conceptions of the nation and with nationality. This paper focuses on the relationship between citizenship (which defines inclusion and exclusion) and the concept of the nation in recent European history.