A/HRC/17/33
minimum age of employment, apprenticeship and training, membership of trade unions,
accommodation, social security, access to health services, etc.), and would make these
groups less vulnerable to xenophobia or racism in politics and in the wider society.
2.
Noncitizen voting rights: a global issue
71.
The Special Rapporteur recalls that the anomaly of foreign non-citizens living in
democratic host countries without political rights has long been viewed as problematic. As
previously discussed, naturalization rules and practices vary from State to State, and in
some places immigrants have little chance of becoming citizens due to a variety of factors.
As a result, countries of destination have had to devise policies and institutions to respond
to the problems of increased ethnic diversity.33 The central issues are: defining who is a
citizen, how newcomers can become citizens and what citizenship means. In principle the
nation State only allows a single membership, but migrants and their descendants have a
relationship to more than one State. They may be citizens of two States, or they may be a
citizen of one State and live in another. Thus large-scale settlement inevitably leads to a
debate on citizenship.34
72.
The first concern for migrants is not the exact content of citizenship, but how they
can obtain it, in order to achieve a legal status formally equal to that of other citizens.
Access to citizenship varies in different countries, depending on the prevailing concept of
nationhood. The Special Rapporteur recalls different types of models which define
citizenship:
(a)
The imperial model. In this model, the definition of belonging to the nation
is defined as being a subject of the same power or ruler. This model allowed the
integration of the various peoples of multi-ethnic empires (British, Austro-Hungarian,
Ottoman, etc.), and remained formally in operation in the United Kingdom until the
Nationality Act of 1981,35 which created a modern type of citizenship for the first
time. The concept almost always has an ideological character, in that it helps to
obscure the actual dominance of a particular ethnic group or nationality over the other
subject peoples;
(b)
The ethnic model. The definition of belonging to the nation is asserted in
terms of ethnicity (common descent, language and culture), which often means
exclusion of minorities from citizenship and from the community of the nation;
(c)
The republican model. The definition of the nation is that of a political
community, on the grounds of a constitution, laws and citizenship, with the possibility
of admitting newcomers to the community. This approach dates back to the French
and American revolutions. France is the most obvious current example.
(d)
The multicultural model. Here the nation is also defined as a political
community, based on a constitution, laws and citizenship that can admit newcomers.
However, in this model newcomers can maintain their distinctive cultures and form
ethnic communities, providing they conform to the basic national laws. This pluralist
or multicultural approach became dominant in the 1970s and 1980s in Australia,
Canada and Sweden, and was also influential in other West European countries.
33
34
35
18
See in particular Citizenship Policies for an Age of Migration, T. Alexander Aleinikoff and Douglas
Klusmeyer, 2001.
See note 5 above, p. 44.
Available at:
http://www.statutelaw.gov.uk/content.aspx?&parentActiveTextDocId=1360590&ActiveTextDocId=1
360658.