Dimitris Christopoulos, Professor at the Department of Political Science and History at Panteion University, analyzes the concept of Citizenship. He examines the different schools of thought, the problematic provisions of the past, and the current state of the Greek Citizenship Code. […]
Read More… from Citizenship: who is a Greek Citizen / Ten-minute Lessons on the Constitution
The book examines the concept of citizenship in Greece, analyzing the legislation and social contradictions. It highlights the historical and political developments that shaped the Greek Citizenship Code, as well as the challenges and limitations faced by migrants and minorities in their integration into Greek society. […]
Read More… from Who is a Greek citizen?
This essay highlights the existential and political dimension of the refugee experience, denouncing the loss of citizenship and the forced categorization of refugees under forms of “humanitarian management.” Drawing from both personal and collective experience, Arendt deconstructs the rhetoric of integration, emphasizing the need for political recognition and equal participation of refugees in the public […]
Read More… from We the refugees
This work explores the lived experience of border crossing through an auto-ethnographic lens, focusing on the socio-political constructions of legality and identity. By situating personal narrative within broader geopolitical contexts, the author critically engages with concepts of statehood, migration, and the bureaucratic production of illegality. The study challenges dominant discourses around mobility and belonging, offering […]
Read More… from Illegal’ traveller: An auto-ethnography of borders.
Rena Souli – Born in Albania and now lives in Greece […]
Read More… from Rena Souli