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Article

Trapped in the lobby: Europe’s revolving doors and the Other as Xenos

Details

Citation

Acosta Arcarazo D & Martire J (2014) Trapped in the lobby: Europe’s revolving doors and the Other as Xenos. European Law Review, 39 (3), pp. 362-379. http://www.sweetandmaxwell.co.uk/Catalogue/ProductDetails.aspx?recordid=427&productid=6968

Abstract
The figure of the Other stands prominently at the centre of debates concerning European social and political identity. Notwithstanding the centrality of such a notion, the figure of the Other appears as underdeveloped. Who is, theoretically speaking, the Other? And what does the proposition tell us about the way in which Europe understands itself? This article explores these questions by analysing problems in the legal framework of EU citizenship and immigration law as well as in its national implementation. This legal framework is symptomatic of a profound malaise affecting Europe. Increasingly adopting a strategy based on the principle of “revolving doors” as a means of dealing with outsiders, Europe treats the Other as a “Xenos”, an alien form of life which is included yet distrusted, welcomed yet under threat of expulsion. This conception of the Other as Xenos reflects a solipsistic, static and auto-referential idea of Europe, one that ultimately prevents the formation of a pluralistic and multifaceted European identity, and endangers the European ethical and political project as a whole.

Keywords
European Law; Migration; Immigration; Citizenship; Other; Xenos

Journal
European Law Review: Volume 39, Issue 3

StatusPublished
Publication date30/06/2014
Date accepted by journal06/11/2013
URL
PublisherSweet & Maxwell
Publisher URL
ISSN0307-5400