Investigating Citizenship: An Agenda for Citizenship Studies
In: Citizenship studies, Band 11, Heft 1, S. 5-17
ISSN: 1469-3593
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In: Citizenship studies, Band 11, Heft 1, S. 5-17
ISSN: 1469-3593
In: Der moderne Staat: dms ; Zeitschrift für Public Policy, Recht und Management, Band 14, Heft 1, S. 24-42
ISSN: 2196-1395
When digital technologies become a part of everyday life in most parts of society, it changes the way we work, organize, communicate, and make relations. It also changes the relationship between the state and its citizens - a relationship usually conceptualized as citizenship. To capture this transformation, a new concept of digital citizenship has emerged. The overall purpose of this paper is to overcome the fragmentation of knowledge about how citizenship is transformed into digital citizenship through a systematic review of the academic literature on the concept of digital citizenship. The literature review identifies four streams of literature in the academic landscape of digital citizenship, and by a content analysis, it outlines the many dimensions and facets of digital citizenship. In this way, the literature review offers a comprehensive picture of both the impacts of the digital transformation on citizenship and the concept within the academic debate.
In: Environmental politics, Band 14, Heft 2, S. 195-210
ISSN: 1743-8934
In: Citizenship studies, Band 2, Heft 1, S. 23-41
ISSN: 1362-1025
Traditional statist approaches to citizenship emphasize the rights & duties of individuals as members of bounded sovereign communities, & deny that citizenship has any meaning when detached from the sovereign nation-state. Theorists in the Kantian tradition have used the idea of world citizenship to refer to obligations to care about the future of the whole human race. Here, this approach is extended by arguing for a dialogic conception of cosmopolitan citizenship. What distinguishes this approach is the claim that separate states & other actors have an obligation to give institutional expression to the idea of a universal communication community that reflects the heterogeneous character of international society. 59 References. Adapted from the source document.
In: Parliamentary affairs: a journal of representative politics, Band 55, Heft 3, S. 488-504
ISSN: 0031-2290
In: The Oxford Handbook of the Australian Constitution, C. Saunders, A. Stone, eds, Oxford University Press, UK, 2018, Forthcoming
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In: Max Planck Encyclopedia of Comparative Constitutional Law (2017)
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Working paper
In: THE INTERNATIONAL ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ETHICS, pp. 764-773, H. LaFollette, ed., Oxford: Blackwell, 2013
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In: Public money & management: integrating theory and practice in public management, Band 14, S. 9-28
ISSN: 0954-0962
In: Citizenship studies, Band 16, Heft 2, S. 153-172
ISSN: 1469-3593
In: Relations Industrielles/Industrial Relations, Band 60, Heft 4
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In: The International Conference Education and Creativity for a Knowledge Based Society – Social and Political Sciences, Communication, Foreign Languages and Public Relations, 2012, Titu Maiorescu University, pp. 192-196
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In: Environmental politics, Band 14, Heft 2, S. 195-210
ISSN: 0964-4016
In: Local government studies, Band 29, Heft 1, S. 131-132
ISSN: 0300-3930
In: Journal of citizenship and globalisation studies, Band 1, Heft 1, S. 1-9
ISSN: 2450-8632
Abstract
This introductory paper to our first issue provides reflection on the concept of critical global citizenship at both theoretical and practical levels. We maintain that 'citizenship', irrespective of its level of articulation (i.e. national, international, global, etc.) remains an issue that reflects a status, a feeling and practices that are intrinsically interlinked. As a legal status, formal citizenship allows individuals to form a sense of belonging within a political community and, therefore, empowers them to act and perform their citizenship within the spatial domains of the nation-state. Critical global citizenship, asks these same individuals not so much to neglect these notions of belonging and practice to a particular locale, but to extend such affinities beyond the territorial boundaries of their formal national membership and to think critically and ethically about their local, national and global relationship with those who are different from themselves. Making a case for a critical global citizenship, however, also requires acknowledging material inequalities that affect the most vulnerable (i.e. migrants, asylum seekers, those experiencing poverty, etc.) and which mean that efforts to cultivate global citizenship orientations to address social injustice are not enacted on an even playing field. As such, a critical global citizenship approach espouses a performative citizenship that is at once democratic and ethical, as well as being aimed at achieving social peace and sustainable justice, but which is also affected by material conditions of inequality that require political solutions and commitment from individuals, states, non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and civil society organisations.