| Literature DB >> 33869482 |
Swantje Falcke1, Maarten Vink2.
Abstract
The German citizenship law underwent a paradigmatic amendment in 2000. One often overlooked change of this reform was the abolishment of the domestic clause ("Inlandsklausel") that implied a substantial restriction to de facto dual citizenship acceptance. Combining data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (waves 1993-2006) with original data on origin country policies on dual citizenship and citizenship reacquisition, we analyse the impact of the abolishment of the domestic clause on naturalization rates. We apply a difference-in-difference design to investigate the causal impact of this element of the reform which has remained under-studied. We do not find an impact of the abolishment of the domestic clause on naturalization rates, neither among the general migrant population, nor among Turkish migrants who are alleged to be targeted specifically by this reform. These results suggest that a more restrictive approach to dual citizenship did not dissuade migrants from acquiring German citizenship after 2000.Entities:
Keywords: Germany; difference-in-differences analysis; dual citizenship; immigrants; naturalization
Year: 2020 PMID: 33869482 PMCID: PMC8022491 DOI: 10.3389/fsoc.2020.536940
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Sociol ISSN: 2297-7775
Figure 1Absolute numbers of naturalisations in Germany, 1994–2017. Source: calculations by authors based on Destatis (2018). Numbers exclude ethnic Germans.
Figure 2Identification of the effect of the abolishment of the domestic clause in German citizenship law.
Figure 3The unadjusted cumulative naturalization rate between 1993 and 2006 (A), Differences in naturalization rates between Treatment and control group over time. Dots denote point estimates and vertical lines correspond to 95% CI (B).
The impact of the abolishment of the domestic clause in 2000 on naturalization rates.
| Difference- | 0.0235 | 0.0242 | 0.0230 | 0.0171 |
| in-differences | (0.0156) | (0.0152) | (0.0147) | (0.0140) |
| 12,147 | 10,453 | 8,732 | 6,972 |
For all coefficients, p > 0.05.
The outcome variables indicate whether someone is a German citizen. Results include controls for gender, age, age-squared, ysm, ysm-squared, years of education, married, married to German citizen, child below 18, working, household income, EU, year FE, federal state FE, region of origin FE. Standard errors are clustered by individuals (in parentheses).
The impact of the abolishment of the domestic clause in 2000 on naturalization rates, excluding EU citizens that can be dual citizens after 2000 based on reciprocity.
| Difference-in-differences | 0.0277 (0.0368) | 0.0345 (0.0364) | 0.0395 (0.0358) | 0.0347 (0.0365) |
| 7,599 | 6,550 | 5,482 | 4,371 |
For all coefficients, p > 0.05.
The outcome variables indicate whether someone is a German citizen. Results include controls for gender, age, age-squared, ysm, ysm-squared, years of education, married, married to German citizen, child below 18, working, household income, EU, year FE, federal state FE, region of origin FE. Standard errors are clustered by individuals (in parentheses).
Figure 4The unadjusted naturalization rate between 1993 and 2006 for Turkish vs. other migrants (A), Differences in naturalization rates between Turkish migrants (treatment group) and other (control group) over time. Dots denote point estimates and vertical lines correspond to 95% CI (B).
The impact of the abolishment of the domestic clause in 2000 for Turkish migrants.
| Difference-in-differences | 0.0180 (0.0149) | 0.0195 (0.0143) | 0.0211 (0.0137) | 0.0243 (0.0131) |
| 12,147 | 10,453 | 8,732 | 6,972 |
For all coefficients, p > 0.05.
The outcome variables indicate whether someone is a German citizen. Results include controls for gender, age, age-squared, ysm, ysm-squared, years of education, married, married to German citizen, child below 18, working, household income, EU, year FE, federal state FE. Standard errors are clustered by individuals (in parentheses).