When:
Thursday, Mar 11, 2021 12:00p -
1:30p

Where:
Online event
http://bit.ly/MillionaireMobility
Cambridge, MA 02139

EventScheduled OnlineEventAttendanceMode

Admission:
FREE

Categories:
Lectures & Conferences, University, Virtual & Streaming

Event website:
http://calendar.mit.edu/event/MillionaireMobility

Part of the Myron Weiner Seminar Series on International Migration with guest speaker Kristin Surak, Assistant Professor in Sociology, London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE)


Please register for this Zoom webinar at http://bit.ly/MillionaireMobility


Abstract:


Why do wealthy people purchase citizenship in peripheral countries? This talk investigates the demand for citizenship by investment programmes, which enable naturalisation based on a donation or financial investment. Extending research on long-distance naturalisation among the middle class and on residence by investment programmes, I examine the motives of the wealthy using citizenship by investment options. Based on over one hundred interviews with rich naturalisers and intermediaries in the citizenship industry, I find that mobility, both in the present and as a future hedge, is a strong driver, followed by business advantages. Often it is privileges in third countries – not the place granting the citizenship – that are sought. In contrast to middle-class strategic naturalisers, quality of life, education options, and job prospects were not important, though navigating geopolitical barriers and risks were. Many naturalisers were not compensating for the failures of their citizenship at birth, but manoeuvering within a world of state competition. Finally, some individuals inverted the citizenship hierarchy and downgraded from ‘first tier’ memberships when, after years of living abroad, their nationality became a liability. The conclusion elaborates on the duplex structure of intra-state and inter-state inequality that channels demand, and the implications for citizenship more broadly.


About the speaker:


Kristin Surak joined the London School of Economics in 2020 from SOAS University of London where she was a Senior Lecturer (Associate Professor) of Japanese Politics. Her research on international migration, nationalism, and political sociology has been translated into a half-dozen languages. In addition to publishing in major academic and intellectual journals, she also writes regularly for popular outlets, including the London Review of Books, New Statesman, New Left Review, and Washington Post. She is the author of Making Tea, Making Japan: Cultural Nationalism in Practice (Stanford University Press 2013), which received the Book of the Year Award from the American Sociological Association’s Asian Section. She has been a Richard B. Fischer Member of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, Fung Global Fellow at Princeton University, Sainsbury Fellow at the Sainsbury Institute for Japanese Arts and Cultures, and a Visiting Professor at the Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, and she is a Lifetime Fellow of Clare Hall, University of Cambridge. The American Academy of Political and Social Science has recognized her scholarship, which has been funded by the German Science Foundation, Japan Foundation, Fulbright-Hays Foundation, and Leverhulme Foundation, among others. She comments regularly for global media outlets, including the BBC, Deutsche Welle, Channel News Asia TV, and Sky TV News. Her book Citizenship 4 Sale: Millionaires, Microstates, and Mobility will be published by Harvard University Press in 2021


Free and open to the public


Sponsored by the Inter-University Committee on International Migration


For more information or accessibility accommodations please contact [email protected].


The Inter-University Committee on International Migration


Since its establishment in 1974, the Inter-University Committee on International Migration has been a focal point for migration and refugee studies at member institutions, which include Boston University, Brandeis University, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Harvard University, MIT, Tufts University, and Wellesley College. The committee is chaired by MIT as a program of the Center for International Studies (CIS).


Migration Seminar Series


During each academic year, the Committee sponsors a seminar series on international migration, The Myron Weiner Seminar Series on International Migration, held at MIT's Center for International Studies. The seminars explore factors affecting international population movements and their impact upon sending and receiving countries and relations among them.


Sign up for Migration emails to get notified about upcoming events at https://cis.mit.edu/connect-cis


A full listing of Migration seminars is available at http://bit.ly/MigrationSeminars

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03/11/2021 12:00:00 03/11/2021 13:30:00 America/New_York Millionaire Mobility and the Sale of Citizenship Part of the Myron Weiner Seminar Series on International Migration with guest speaker Kristin Surak, Assistant Professor in Sociology, London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) Plea...

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