Perspectives on Social Citizenship in the EU – From Status Positivus to Status Socialis Activus via Two Forms of Transnational Solidarity

Dimitry Kochenov (editor) EU Citizenship and Federalism: the Role of Rights, Cambridge University Press, 2015, Forthcoming

Queen's University Belfast Law Research Paper No. 10

28 Pages Posted: 26 Apr 2015 Last revised: 30 Nov 2015

See all articles by Dagmar Schiek

Dagmar Schiek

Sutherland School of Law, University College Dublin; University College Cork - School of Law; Queen's University Belfast - School of Law; Queen's University Belfast - School of Law; University of Bremen (- 10/1999); University of Leeds - up to 10/2014

Date Written: April 24, 2015

Abstract

Ever since the inauguration of European Union (EU) citizenship, elements of social citizenship have been on the agenda of European integration. European level social benefits were proposed early on, and demands for collective labour rights have followed suit. This paper uses the theoretical umbrella of transnational social citizenship in order to link transnational access to social benefits and collective labour rights. It promotes transnational rights as the best way to conceptualise EU social citizenship as an institution enabling the enjoyment of EU integration without being forced to forego social rights at other levels. Such a perspective sits well in a collection on EU citizenship and federalism, since it simultaneously challenges demands of renationalisation of social rights in the EU and pleas to reduce EU-level citizenship rights to a merely liberal dimension. Social citizenship as promoted here requires an interactive conceptualisation of regulatory and judicial powers at different levels of government as typical for federal systems.

In linking citizenship with human rights the chapter highlights different statuses of citizens. It argues that the rights constituted by social citizenship derive from a status positivus and a status socialis activus, expanding the time-honoured categories of Jellinek. This concept is developed further by linking the notions of receptive solidarity to the status positivus and the notion of participative solidarity to the status socialis activus. In relation to European Union citizenship, it promotes a sustainable transnational social citizenship catering for receptive and participative solidarity.

These ideas contrast with most current discourses on EU citizenship. The stress on social citizenship takes issue with a retreat to mere liberalist notions of EU-level citizenship, and the stress on rights takes issue with conceptualising EU citizenship as a community bond with obligations, downplaying the empowering potential of rights. The difficulty of conceptualising transnational social citizenship is, on the one hand, to avoid taking up the tune of populist discourses imagining those moving beyond state borders as a threat to national social citizenship and, on the other hand, to reject the legitimate fears of those remaining at home of creating rupture in the social fabric of Europe’s society. Promoting transnational social citizenship rights based on receptive and participative solidarity, the present paper suggests a way for avoiding these pitfalls.

Keywords: EU citizenship, solidarity, social citizenship, transnational citizenship, industrial democracy, welfare state, social state

Suggested Citation

Schiek, Dagmar G., Perspectives on Social Citizenship in the EU – From Status Positivus to Status Socialis Activus via Two Forms of Transnational Solidarity (April 24, 2015). Dimitry Kochenov (editor) EU Citizenship and Federalism: the Role of Rights, Cambridge University Press, 2015, Forthcoming, Queen's University Belfast Law Research Paper No. 10, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2598809

Dagmar G. Schiek (Contact Author)

Sutherland School of Law, University College Dublin ( email )

Belfield
Dublin 4
Ireland

HOME PAGE: http://https://people.ucd.ie/dagmar.schiek1

University College Cork - School of Law ( email )

School of Law (-10/2023)
Aras na Laoi, College Road
Cork, County Cork
Ireland

Queen's University Belfast - School of Law ( email )

School of Law
Queen's University Belfast
Belfast BT7 1NN, BT7 1NN
Northern Ireland

Queen's University Belfast - School of Law ( email )

School of Law
Queen's University Belfast
Belfast BT7 1NN, BT7 1NN
Northern Ireland

University of Bremen (- 10/1999)

Bremen
Germany

University of Leeds - up to 10/2014 ( email )

Leeds, LS2 9JT
United Kingdom

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