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How citizenship matters: narratives of stateless and citizenship choice in Estonia
Authors:Lisa C. Fein  Jeremy B. Straughn
Affiliation:1. Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Westminster College, Fulton, MO, USA;2. Department of Transnational Studies, Westminster College, Fulton, MO, USA
Abstract:The phenomenon of statelessness is most often studied as an issue of international and human-rights law. In contrast, this paper examines narratives of citizenship choice among initially stateless Russian-speaking residents of Estonia in order to explore the practical meanings of (non)citizenship in a context where the available options include both national citizenship and statelessness. While legal aspects of citizenship do explain many of the perceived benefits and disadvantages of various citizenship options, we find that deliberations about citizenship choice also reflect extra-legal normative and affective dimensions of civic belonging. The resulting multidimensional model of citizenship helps account for courses of action that would appear anomalous if citizenship choice were merely an instrumental matter of weighing the costs and benefits of different options. It also points to a growing disjuncture among citizenship as a source of legal rights and obligations, as a normative framework, and as a site of attachment and identification.
Keywords:Baltics  citizenship  citizenship choice  Estonia  European Union  national minorities  Russian-speaking  statelessness
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