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Commonwealth of Nations - Benefits of membership and contemporary concerns

Commonwealth of Nations - Benefits of membership and contemporary concerns: Encyclopedia II - Commonwealth of Nations - Benefits of membership and contemporary concerns

The Commonwealth has often been likened to an English gentlemen's club, and the issue of membership - who is and who is not a member of the organisation - often seems to be more important, and certainly attracts much more attention, than what the organisation actually does. This is because the main benefit of membership is the opportunity for close and relatively frequent interaction, on an info ...

See also:

Commonwealth of Nations, Commonwealth of Nations - Origins, Commonwealth of Nations - Membership, Commonwealth of Nations - Non-members, Commonwealth of Nations - Suspension, Commonwealth of Nations - Termination of membership, Commonwealth of Nations - Organisation and objectives, Commonwealth of Nations - Benefits of membership and contemporary concerns, Commonwealth of Nations - Cultural Links, Commonwealth of Nations - Literature, Commonwealth of Nations - Commonwealth Business Council, Commonwealth of Nations - List of Commonwealth members

Commonwealth of Nations, Commonwealth of Nations - Benefits of membership and contemporary concerns, Commonwealth of Nations - Commonwealth Business Council, Commonwealth of Nations - Cultural Links, Commonwealth of Nations - List of Commonwealth members, Commonwealth of Nations - Literature, Commonwealth of Nations - Membership, Commonwealth of Nations - Non-members, Commonwealth of Nations - Organisation and objectives, Commonwealth of Nations - Origins, Commonwealth of Nations - Suspension, Commonwealth of Nations - Termination of membership, Anglosphere, British Empire, British Empire and Commonwealth Museum, British Overseas Territory, Commonwealth of Independent States, Community of Portuguese Language Countries, Dominion, La Francophonie, High Commissioner, List of Commonwealth visits made by Queen Elizabeth II, Organization of Ibero-American States

Commonwealth of Nations: Encyclopedia II - Commonwealth of Nations - Benefits of membership and contemporary concerns



Commonwealth of Nations - Benefits of membership and contemporary concerns

The Commonwealth has often been likened to an English gentlemen's club, and the issue of membership - who is and who is not a member of the organisation - often seems to be more important, and certainly attracts much more attention, than what the organisation actually does. This is because the main benefit of membership is the opportunity for close and relatively frequent interaction, on an informal and equal basis, between members who share many ties of language, culture, and history.

In its early days, the Commonwealth also constituted a significant economic bloc. Commonwealth countries accorded each others' goods privileged access to their markets ("Commonwealth Preference"), and there was a free or preferred right of migration from one Commonwealth country to another. These rights have been steadily eroded, but their consequences remain. Within most Commonwealth countries, there are substantial communities with family ties to other members of the Commonwealth, going beyond the effects of the original colonization of parts of the Commonwealth by settlers from the British Isles. Furthermore, consumers in Commonwealth countries retain many preferences for goods from other members of the Commonwealth, so that even in the absence of tariff privileges, there continues to be more trade within the Commonwealth than might be predicted. On the United Kingdom's entry to the European Union, the Lomé Convention preserved some of the preferential access rights of Commonwealth goods to the UK market.

In more recent decades there has been a mutual decline of interest in maintaining active inter-Commonwealth relations, and the organisation's direct political and economic importance has declined. Realist critics have argued that in the 21st Century the organisation is an inherently arbitrary alliance with members that are united only through a historical accident of British colonialism. They argue that the organisation lacks a balanced membership, and point out that it is very unusual for any international organisation to exclude highly important regions of the world such as most of Western Europe and South America from membership. Indeed, many Commonwealth members look increasingly to regional partners, non-Commonwealth as well as Commonwealth, to form their most important alliances.

The United Kingdom has forged closer relationships with other European countries through the European Union; the UK's entry was widely felt as a betrayal by citizens of the "Old Commonwealth" whose economies had been developed on the assumption of access to British markets. Similarly, former British colonies have forged closer relationships with non-Commonwealth trading partners and closer geographic neighbours. Reaction to immigration from the new Commonwealth countries into the United Kingdom in the 1950s and early 1960s led to the restriction of the right of migration. The Commonwealth today mainly restricts itself to encouraging community between nations and to placing moral pressure on members who violate international laws, such as human rights laws, and abandon democratically-elected government. Key activities today include training experts in developing countries and assisting with and monitoring elections.

Some Commonwealth countries give Commonwealth citizens privileges that are not accorded to aliens: for example, in the United Kingdom, the right to vote is given to all Commonwealth citizens resident in that country. This is reciprocated mainly in the Commonwealth Caribbean, even to the point where in some of the countries (including the UK) resident Commonwealth citizens may even be elected or appointed to the national legislature. However, these privileges are largely not on a reciprocal basis, and it is up to each country to decide what privileges it accords to Commonwealth citizenship, with the exception of the Commonwealth Scholarship. Other privileges that the United Kingdom grants Commonwealth citizens include access to immigration programmes such as the working holidaymaker visa. Some of the privileges offered by the individual countries have eroded over the last few decades, although most countries continue to afford special treatment in the area of immigration (e.g. right of abode in UK for some) and visas.

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1949, 1950, 1994, 1995, A Distant Shore, Adelaide, Aden, African, Anglosphere, Association of Commonwealth Universities, Australia, Bahrain, Balfour Declaration, Bangladesh, Booker Prize, Britain, British Empire, British Empire and Commonwealth Museum, British Monarch, British Overseas Territory, British monarch, Burma, CHOGM, Cameroon, Canada, Caryl Phillips, Charles de Gaulle, Commonwealth Business Council, Commonwealth Day, Commonwealth English, Commonwealth Games, Commonwealth Heads of Government, Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Commonwealth Lawyers Association, Commonwealth Parliamentary Association, Commonwealth Realms, Commonwealth Scholarship, Commonwealth Secretary-General, Commonwealth of Australia, Commonwealth of Independent States, Commonwealth of The Bahamas, Community of Portuguese Language Countries, Comunidade dos Países de Língua Portuguesa, David Ben-Gurion, Doha Development Agenda, Dominion, Dominions, Don McKinnon, Eamon de Valera, Egypt, English language, European Union, Fiji, Flag of the Commonwealth, France, Harare Declaration, Head of the Commonwealth, High Commissioner, Hong Kong, Imperial Conferences, India, Indo-Fijians, Iraq, Ireland Act 1949, Israel, Jordan, King of France, Kuwait, La Francophonie, League of Nations mandate, List of Commonwealth visits made by Queen Elizabeth II, List of members of the Commonwealth of Nations by continent, List of members of the Commonwealth of Nations by date joined, List of members of the Commonwealth of Nations by name, Lomé Convention, London, Lord Rosebery, Mark Haddon, Mohammad Ali Jinnah, Mohandas Gandhi, Mozambique, Namibia, New Commonwealth, New Zealand, Nigeria, North America, Old Commonwealth, Olympic Games, Oman, Organization of Ibero-American States, Pakistan, Parliament of Westminster, People's Republic of China, Portugal, Portuguese, Prime Ministers, Prince of Wales, Public Private Partnerships, Qatar, Queen Elizabeth II, Realist, Republic of Ireland, Rhodesia, Robert Mugabe, Sean Lemass, Secretariat, South Africa, South America, South Australia, Spain, Statute of Westminster, Taoiseach, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, Tuvalu, UK law, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, United Nations, United States, Vichy France, WTO, Western Europe, White Commonwealth, World War II, Zanu-PF, Zimbabwe, Zimbabwean, apartheid, association, bowls, capacity building, civil society, colonialism, colonialist, colony, commonwealths, cricket, decolonised, democracy, democratically-elected, developed countries, developing countries, digital divide, driving on the left, economic, gentlemen's club, governance, head of state, human rights, immigration, imperialism, international organisation, la Francophonie, mandates, military coups, organisation, private sector, protectorates, racialist, racism, republic, republican, republics, right of abode in UK, rugby, sanctions, self-governing colonies, sovereign states, special administrative region, universities, Éamon Ó Cuív



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Benefits of membership and contemporary concerns", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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