Kaya, Ayhan2024-07-182024-07-1820121362-10251469-3593https://doi.org/10.1080/13621025.2012.667608https://hdl.handle.net/11411/7484This article studies the multiple connections between contemporary structures of German and Turkish citizenship, and German-Turkish migrants' own practices of citizenship transcending national borders. Hence, the citizenship structures of the two countries and the ways in which they shape and are shaped by the migrants' civic activism shall be exposed in a dialogical way. It will be argued that German-Turks constitute a transnational space, making it imperative that the existing institutions of citizenship in both countries respond to their globalized and transnationalized experiences. Addressing the literature on transnational space, citizenship studies, diaspora studies and cultural studies, and referring to a survey conducted among German-Turks, this work will briefly refer to the production of transnational space by immigrants of Turkish origin and their descendants in Germany and the use they make of the means of globalization, which provide them with a set of diversified habitats of meaning away from their country of origin. Subsequently, it will claim that the traditional framework of national citizenship has been superseded as transmigrants have become mobile between their countries of origin and of settlement in a way that may require dual citizenship as well as dual loyalty, allegiance and orientation.eninfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessCitizenshipMigrantsGlobalizationİdentitySecuritizationSpaceIntegrationImmigrantsTransnational citizenship: German-Turks and liberalizing citizenship regimesArticle2-s2.0-8486117305110.1080/13621025.2012.6676081722Q115316Q2WOS:000303560400002