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Access to Citizenship & Its Impact on Immigrant Integration Preliminary Results for Spain December 14, 2012 Barcelona Center for International Affairs.

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Presentation on theme: "Access to Citizenship & Its Impact on Immigrant Integration Preliminary Results for Spain December 14, 2012 Barcelona Center for International Affairs."— Presentation transcript:

1 Access to Citizenship & Its Impact on Immigrant Integration Preliminary Results for Spain December 14, 2012 Barcelona Center for International Affairs Kristen JeffersJasper Dag Tjaden ACIT ResearcherPolicy Analyst University College Dublin Migration Policy Group

2 EUDO Citizenship European Union Democracy Observatory (EUDO), Robert Schuman Centre of the European University Institute in Florence Goal: to provide data for research and public policy Features: Databases: national citizenship laws, citizenship case law, modes of acquisition, modes of loss, citizenship statistics Publications: country reports, comparative citizenship analyses, working papers, policy briefs Citizenship news Citizenship forum Citizenship indicators: law, implementation, acquisition, integration Five partner institutions:

3 ACIT Project Access to Citizenship and its Impact on Immigrant Integration Collection and comparison of national and international evidence on effect of the the acquisition of citizenship on immigrants’ participation in society and the democratic process Four sets of citizenship indicators: – CITLAW: indicators of legal provisions of citizenship laws – CITIMP: indicators of formal and informal aspects of naturalisation procedures – CITACQ: descriptive data of citizenship acquisition in European countries with a specific focus on the naturalisation of immigrants – CITINT: descriptive data about differences in integration outcomes Explaining the impact of citizenship laws on – CITACQ: acquisition rates – CITINT: post-acquisition outcomes (integration, participation, mobility) In-depth case studies in 10 EU Member States: Austria, Estonia, France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, Spain, United Kingdom

4 Citizenship Law (CITLAW) Indicators 57 indicators compare specific aspects of citizenship regimes across countries and time – basic indicators (e.g. ius soli for second generation) – several combined indicators (e.g. ius soli at birth) – six combined indicators: ius sanguinis, ius soli, ordinary naturalisation, special naturalisation, renunciation, withdrawal Indicators measure the degree of inclusion and individual choice (vs. exclusion and state power to determine acquistion or loss): Indicator scores range from 0 to 1 0 = lowest degree of inclusion or individual choice 1 = highest degree of inclusion or individual choice

5 Summary of Findings

6 Ordinary Naturalisation

7 opportunities language requirements civic knowledge requirements obstacles residence requirement: – Belgium (min) 1.00 – Spain 0.29 – Greece (max) 0.24 – EU-15 0.61 toleration of dual citizenship criminal record requirements economic resources requirements

8 Special Naturalisation (selected modes)

9 Special Naturalisation opportunities spousal transfer child transfer adoption reacquisition historical and cultural affinity refugees obstacles stateless persons

10 38 indicators compare formal aspects of naturalisation procedure. These include all stages, from efforts by public authorities to inform applicants to the options to appeal a negative decision. 5 dimensions covered administrative procedure: 1)Promotion: how much do authorities encourage applicants to apply? 2)Documentation: how easily can applicants prove they meet the conditions? 3)Discretion: how much room do authorities have to interpret conditions? 4)Bureaucracy: how easy is it for authorities to come to a decision? 5)Review: how strong is judicial oversight of the procedure? Citizenship Implementation Indicators (CITIMP)

11 Summary of Findings Positive link between law (CITLAW) & implementation (CITIMP) Spain slightly below EU-15 average (only,47 out of 1,00)

12 Only average policies to promote naturalisation Demanding documentation, more than in most EU15 countries Slightly discretionary procedure, more so than in most countries Just as bureaucratic as in most countries Strong judicial review Procedures in Spain are most similar to those in Austria

13 Results by dimension Promotion OppCosts and basic promotional materials ObsSupport to pass requirements, promotional service or campaign Discretion Opp Limited discretion on residence requirement ObsDiscretionary procedure & language/integration assessment Review OppAppeal to highest level of procedure & integration assessment that can change decision in merit ObsTime limits, difficult to interpret decision on lang./integ.

14 Documentation Documentation is more demanding than in most EU-15 countries Complicated documentation on identity, criminal record, job situation Documentation from country of origin (identity, criminal record) No flexibility on proof of language and integration assessment Few exemptions on humanitarian or accessibility grounds Spain

15 Citizenship acquisition (CITACQ) Acquisition indicators compare the rates of citizenship acquisition among foreign-born persons in their country of residence Percentages of foreign-born immigrants who have acquired citizenship at any point in time, not naturalisation rates measuring the number of new naturalisations divided by resident population with foreign citizenship Information based on European Labour Force Survey Survey Ad Hoc Module (2008) that targets immigrants and their descendants, aged 15-67 Data exclusively on foreign-born (1 st generation) and allows for comparisons of citizenship acquisition rates across 25 European countries

16 Includes information on the following indicators for citizenship acquisition by foreign-born: – ALL – SEX (female vs. male) – ORIGIN (EU vs. non-EU countries) – AGE AT MIGRATION (age at which respondent took up residence) – YEARS OF RESIDENCE (years of residence) – YEARS OF RESIDENCE (minimum number of years of residence) – TIME UNTIL NATURALISATION (numbers of years until naturalisation) Citizenship acquisition (CITACQ)

17 On average around 34% of foreign-born persons are a citizen of their EU-15 country of residence. – Citizenship acquisition rates in EU-15 range are lowest in Luxembourg (10%) and highest in Sweden (67%). The rates in Spain (16%) below the EU-15 average. – Immigrants from non-EU countries (42%) more often acquire citizenship than those from EU countries (20%). On average it takes around 10 years for foreign-born persons to acquire citizenship of their country of residence, within EU-15 countries. – In Luxembourg it takes almost 15 years (on average), whereas in Spain this is around 9 years. Summary of Findings

18 Acquisition rates in EU-15 (+CH, NO) SPAIN

19 Speed of naturalisation Spain

20 Spain compared I (% foreign-born with citizenship)

21 Spain compared II (% foreign-born with citizenship)

22 Analysis of acquisition rates Citizenship acquisition & speed of acquisition are mainly driven by: Socio-economic development of countries of origin Citizenship laws of the country (see following graph) Variation in acquisition rates is mainly explained by: Marital status (married people are more likely to be naturalised) Socio-economic status (employed immigrants are more likely) Gender (female immigrants are more likely) Use of native language at home (immigrants who speak the language of the destination country at home are more likely)

23 Predicted probability of having destination country citizenship by MIPEX Access to Nationality (by years of residence in country) Spain (29) MIPEX Access to Nationality score (adjusted for first generation only), Austria: 34

24 Citizenship and Integration (CITINT) 10 core indicators measure the the extent to which changes in citizenship status affect levels of integration. Two categories of indicators: – Labour force participation (2008 Eurostat LFS ad hoc module) – Social inclusion and standard of living (2008 Eurostat LFS ad hoc module & 2008 EU-SILC) Sample: EU-27, Iceland, Norway, Switzerland As expected, immigrants who naturalised are often better off than immigrants who have not naturalised.

25 Labour Force Participation UNEMPLOYMENT RATE ECONOMIC ACTIVITY RATE OVERQUALIFICATION RATE The gap in unemployment between foreign-born non- citizens and native-born citizens in Spain is among the largest in our sample.

26 Labour Force Participation UNEMPLOYMENT RATE ECONOMIC ACTIVITY RATE OVERQUALIFICATION RATE Naturalized immigrants have lower levels of unemployment than non-citizen immigrants. Immigrants from outside the EU have higher levels of unemployment than immigrants from within the EU. Source: 2008 EU Labour Force Survey Ad Hoc Module

27 Social Inclusion & Standard Of Living EDUCATION LEVEL DWELLING & AREA QUALITY PROPERTY OWNERSHIP HOUSING COST BURDEN RECEIPT OF SOCIAL BENEFITS DIFFICULTY MAKING ENDS MEET UNMET HEALTHCARE NEEDS Source: 2008 EU-SILC Survey Generally, the gaps between the share of immigrants and the share of natives having difficult paying household expenses are larger in Spain than across the EU.

28 Social Inclusion & Standard Of Living EDUCATION LEVEL DWELLING & AREA QUALITY PROPERTY OWNERSHIP HOUSING COST BURDEN RECEIPT OF SOCIAL BENEFITS DIFFICULTY MAKING ENDS MEET UNMET HEALTHCARE NEEDS Source: 2008 EU-SILC Survey Immigrants in Spain spend a larger portion of their income on housing expenses than natives. The gaps between natives and immigrants are larger in Spain compared to the averages for the EU-15 and EU-27.


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