Learning from Investment Migration

Forthcoming in Citizenship and Residence Sales: Rethinking the Boundaries of Belonging (Cambridge, 2022)

25 Pages Posted: 16 Feb 2022

See all articles by Dimitry Kochenov

Dimitry Kochenov

CEU Democracy Institute, Budapest; CEU Department of Legal Studies, Vienna

Kristin Surak

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Date Written: February 12, 2022

Abstract

Countries are competing ever more fervently to attract the best and brightest, whether highly skilled migrant workers, students with potential, or athletes and others boasting exceptional talent. It should therefore come as little surprise that they should vie with each other to lure in the wealthy as well. Indeed, the past thirty years have seen a rapid rise around the world in legislation that enables people to acquire citizenship or residence rights in exchange for a donation or an investment. This work is the draft introductory chapter of the collection entitled Citizenship and Residence Sales: Rethinking the Boundaries of Belonging, which the authors edited for Cambridge University Press. The aim of this text is to introduce the phenomenon of investment migration and position it vis-à-vis the key trends in the literature on this emerging field in order to provide solid ground for the twenty chapters by the leading scholars and practitioners from a handful of disciplines, which follow this introduction in the Cambridge collection. In the process we demonstrate that investment migration frequently has nothing to do with immigration or change of residence; that the phenomenon is rooted in the global rights and duties assignment today, where blood-based passport apartheid is the main principle behind the inequitable self-preservation of the global aristocracy of ‘super citizens’, as well as the nature of the notion of national sovereignty coupled with the nationalist streetlight effect of the huge share of the commentaries, inter alia. As is demonstrated in this chapter and throughout the book, investment migration teaches us a lot about the tensions at the core of citizenship and residence regulation in contemporary world. The volume we edited aims to establish a solid grounding for a serious conversation on the sale of citizenships and residence and its implications in the contemporary world. We are deeply grateful to the twenty-three authors who contributed to the book and draw on their valuable research and insights. The full list of chapters and contributing scholars is appended to this document.

Keywords: citizenship, cbi, rbi, investment migration, residence by investment, citizenship by investment, golden visas, golden passports

Suggested Citation

Kochenov, Dimitry and Kochenov, Dimitry and Surak, Kristin, Learning from Investment Migration (February 12, 2022). Forthcoming in Citizenship and Residence Sales: Rethinking the Boundaries of Belonging (Cambridge, 2022), Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4033542

Dimitry Kochenov (Contact Author)

CEU Democracy Institute, Budapest ( email )

Nador utca 9
Budapest, H-1051
Hungary

CEU Department of Legal Studies, Vienna ( email )

Quellenstraße 51
Vienna, 1100
Austria

Kristin Surak

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
319
Abstract Views
1,415
Rank
175,938
PlumX Metrics