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Moving in circles : the beginning and end of exercising free movement rights

Hester Kroeze (UGent)
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Abstract
Free movement rights in the European Union (EU) allow EU citizens to move and reside within the territory of the Member States under the condition that they are economically active or economically self-sufficient. If they fulfill the requirements under EU law, they also enjoy family reunification rights in the Member State where they reside. The possibility to obtain these rights is reserved for EU citizens who reside in a Member State of which they are not a national, but if a family member acquired residence in another Member State, this right continues to exist, even when they return to the home Member State of the EU citizen (return situation). If EU citizens reside in another Member State without fulfilling the requirements under EU law, their residence can be terminated and followed by expulsion from that Member State, but a Member State is not allowed to impose an entry ban. This chapter compares the requirements that EU citizens and their family members must fulfill to retain family reunification rights in a return situation with the requirements they must fulfill to comply with an expulsion order. It focuses on the question when the exercise of free movement rights under EU law begins and ends and demonstrates that mere movement between Member States does not suffice.

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MLA
Kroeze, Hester. “Moving in Circles : The Beginning and End of Exercising Free Movement Rights.” Family Reunification in Europe : Exposing Inequalities, edited by Ellen Desmet et al., Routledge, 2024, pp. 139–52, doi:10.4324/9781003503217-11.
APA
Kroeze, H. (2024). Moving in circles : the beginning and end of exercising free movement rights. In E. Desmet, M. Belloni, J. Verhellen, D. Vanheule, & A. Güdük (Eds.), Family reunification in Europe : exposing inequalities (pp. 139–152). https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003503217-11
Chicago author-date
Kroeze, Hester. 2024. “Moving in Circles : The Beginning and End of Exercising Free Movement Rights.” In Family Reunification in Europe : Exposing Inequalities, edited by Ellen Desmet, Milena Belloni, Jinske Verhellen, Dirk Vanheule, and Ayse Güdük, 139–52. London: Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003503217-11.
Chicago author-date (all authors)
Kroeze, Hester. 2024. “Moving in Circles : The Beginning and End of Exercising Free Movement Rights.” In Family Reunification in Europe : Exposing Inequalities, ed by. Ellen Desmet, Milena Belloni, Jinske Verhellen, Dirk Vanheule, and Ayse Güdük, 139–152. London: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9781003503217-11.
Vancouver
1.
Kroeze H. Moving in circles : the beginning and end of exercising free movement rights. In: Desmet E, Belloni M, Verhellen J, Vanheule D, Güdük A, editors. Family reunification in Europe : exposing inequalities. London: Routledge; 2024. p. 139–52.
IEEE
[1]
H. Kroeze, “Moving in circles : the beginning and end of exercising free movement rights,” in Family reunification in Europe : exposing inequalities, E. Desmet, M. Belloni, J. Verhellen, D. Vanheule, and A. Güdük, Eds. London: Routledge, 2024, pp. 139–152.
@incollection{01J8HFSQ2XE488PVQATNHKASC5,
  abstract     = {{Free movement rights in the European Union (EU) allow EU citizens to move and reside within the territory of the Member States under the condition that they are economically active or economically self-sufficient. If they fulfill the requirements under EU law, they also enjoy family reunification rights in the Member State where they reside. The possibility to obtain these rights is reserved for EU citizens who reside in a Member State of which they are not a national, but if a family member acquired residence in another Member State, this right continues to exist, even when they return to the home Member State of the EU citizen (return situation). If EU citizens reside in another Member State without fulfilling the requirements under EU law, their residence can be terminated and followed by expulsion from that Member State, but a Member State is not allowed to impose an entry ban. This chapter compares the requirements that EU citizens and their family members must fulfill to retain family reunification rights in a return situation with the requirements they must fulfill to comply with an expulsion order. It focuses on the question when the exercise of free movement rights under EU law begins and ends and demonstrates that mere movement between Member States does not suffice.}},
  author       = {{Kroeze, Hester}},
  booktitle    = {{Family reunification in Europe : exposing inequalities}},
  editor       = {{Desmet, Ellen and Belloni, Milena and Verhellen, Jinske and Vanheule, Dirk and Güdük, Ayse}},
  isbn         = {{9781032614540}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{139--152}},
  publisher    = {{Routledge}},
  series       = {{Routledge Research in Asylum, Migration and Refugee Law}},
  title        = {{Moving in circles : the beginning and end of exercising free movement rights}},
  url          = {{http://doi.org/10.4324/9781003503217-11}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}

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