Chapter 1. Australia European Union Slovenia.- Chapter 2. The Nation State, National Identity and Citizenship.- Chapter 3. The Slovenian National Identity and Citizenship.- Chapter 4. The Australian Identity and Citizenship.- Chapter 5. Citizenship & Exclusion [Statelessness].- Chapter 6. Current Day Citizenship Law [2018-9].- Chapter 7. European Citizenship.- Chapter 8. Human Rights, Identity and Social Cohesion.- Chapter 9. Naturalization through Immigration.- Chapter 10. International Protection.- Chapter 11. Private International Law.- Chapter 12. A Pathway Forward.
Dr Robert Walters, is a Lecturer of Law, Victoria University, Melbourne, Australia, and is an Adjunct Professor with the European Faculty of Law, The New University, Slovenia, Europe. Dr Walters is a member of the ASEAN Law Association, LawAsia – Australia, United Nations Commission on International Trade Law Coordination Committee for Australia, and Asian Privacy Scholar Network. Since completing his PhD, Dr Walters now specializes in data protection – cybercrime/security law, along with international trade, finance and investment law with a particular focus on Australia, Asia Pacific (APEC and ASEAN countries) including Europe. Dr Walters is admitted as an Australian lawyer.
This book aims to enrich the thinking and discussion in relation to the importance that citizenship, immigration, rights and private laws play in the modern world. This is in a time when social cohesion and national identity is being challenged. It will explore the impact these laws have had on Australia, European Union (EU) and Slovenia. Identity and social cohesion are contested concepts and can invoke different responses. The challenges states and the EU are likely to face in retaining and even strengthening their respective identities and social cohesion from continued geopolitical shocks, security, economic volatility and environmental degradation is likely to be formidable. These alone pose some of the most complex political and policy issues facing the world. The EU can be held up as a polity that, has developed an identity and level of cohesion, while allowing member states to retain their national identities. It has, to date, also been successful in managing the rise of nationalism. However, that has come under threat in recent times. Thus, the very foundations of liberal democracy could be diluted from the impact of these challenges. Moreover, the basic foundations of rights have, in part, already been diluted from the rise of terrorism (which is acceptable), however, the geopolitical differences pose a significant challenge, in, and of themselves.