De dubbele woonplaats in het socialezekerheidsrecht
This dissertation deals with the application of residence related rules to persons with a dual residence. It describes the role of residence in Dutch social security law in general and the phenomenon of dual residence in particular.
Onderzoek naar de toepassing van woonplaatsbepalingen op coouders en semigranten.
A growing number of people live in more than one place at the same time. For example in the case of shared parenting or semigrants (people who have taken up residence in another country without definitely turning their back on their country of origin). It is often difficult to apply legislation to these persons. This is also the case in Dutch social security law. This field of law has hundreds of provisions in which it matters where someone lives.
The dissertation contains two sub-studies which examine how administrative authorities and courts apply residence related rules. Does this happen in a consistent, diligent and responsive manner? The sub-study on shared parenting focuses on household rules, whereas the sub-study on semigrants deals with residency rules. Both sub-studies contain an extensive description of legislation, policy and case law.
![van everdingen](/sites/default/files/2023-03/vaneverdingen.jpg)
PhD thesis written by Marjolein van Everdingen.
Also read
-
On 12 June 2024, Dr Domenico Carolei, Lecturer in Public International Law and Public Law at the University of Stirling, gave a talk entitled 'Charting NGO Accountability: Identifying alternative accountability routes'.
-
The Dutch Research Council (NWO) awarded a grant for the new research project CHILD-WAR by Dr. Marieke Hopman and Dr. Guleid Jama.
-
Two Law PhD candidates of the Maastricht Faculty received awards for their doctoral theses during the 21st International Congress of the International Association of the Penal Law in Paris.