A lire sur le site Global Dialogue – Newsletter for the International Sociological Association, un article en anglais sur les mariages binationaux en France :
by Manuela Salcedo, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (EHESS), Paris, France
and Laura Odasso, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium, and member of ISA Research Committee on Biography and Society (RC38)
“It was crazy! The French government gives orders to Moroccan authorities and Consulates to avoid abuses, but there are committed couples like us who are paying the price of very different policies in France […] Then you have the humiliations.”
Over the last decade, the rights of binational couples uniting a European Union citizen and a Third-Country National (TCN) have been profoundly eroded. As residents but not citizens, TCNs are entitled to a limited range of rights and their situation has become increasingly precarious. In France, for instance, the government uses legal-administrative means and invasive practices to interfere with the intimate lives of binational couples, both same-sex and heterosexual. Moreover, the French authorities seem to protect some nationalities and family types more than others.
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