Lectures delivered on the Stevenson foundation, in the University of Glasgow, during the spring and autumn of 1922.- ; Bibliography: p. [223]-227. ; Bibliography: p.[223]-227. ; The statement of the problem -- Other ideals of conduct -- Liberty, equality and fraternity -- The state as means -- The state as end-- The state as personality -- Citizenship and empire -- Internationalism and cosmopolitanism -- Education in citizenship -- De civitate Dei ; Mode of access: Internet.
Insurgent cities and urban citizenship in the 21st century / James Holston -- Gender, place and citizenship in urban South Africa post-1994 / Allison Goebel -- Graduated sovereignty and the fragmented city : mapping the political geography of citizenship in Detroit / L. Owen Kirkpatrick -- Jus-situ? : surprising proposals for place-based citizenship by Jewish and Arab-Palestinian Israelis : 2011 mass housing protests and beyond / Yael Allweil -- Separate, excluded, unequal : struggle and resistance for Palestinian permanent residents in East Jerusalem / Oren Kroll-Zeldin -- Categorization and differential citizenship within neoliberal context : a case study of the Chenchu / Meenakshi Narayan and Sarveswar Sipoy -- Statelessness as a form of citizenship among Tibetan exiles / Namgyal Choedup -- The Hmong of Zomia : cultural citizenship, stateless, and belonging / Faith G. Nibbs -- All citizenship is local : using China to rethink local citizenship / Sophia Woodman
"Although we live in a period of unprecedented globalization and migration, citizenship matters more than ever. Here, Elizabeth F. Cohen and Cyril Ghosh examine multiple facets of the concept, including classic and contemporary theories, historical development, and lived experience. This book is essential reading for students and scholars alike"--
Using the distinction that Richard Ashley and Rob Walker drew in 1990 between two possible critical responses to crisis and the question of sovereignty, this article argues that two strands of thought can be identified, each producing a different understanding of what it means to become a citizen in Ireland. One strand articulates citizenship in terms of sovereign autonomous subjectivity, and thus in terms of horizontal or territorial relations between here and there, us and them, inside and outside. The other strand (re)articulates citizenship in terms of ambiguous paradoxical subjectivity that challenges the modern framing of the politics of citizenship as necessarily needing to be conceptualized in terms of absolute space. This divergence is explored through the 2004 Irish Citizenship Referendum. The concept of citizenship as "trace" is introduced in an attempt to capture how citizenship is reconceptualized differently in the second strand. It is argued that understanding this divergence is necessary in order to consider how classical conceptions of time and space are specifically integral to structures of sovereign power and how perspectives that take these as their starting point fail to account for the increasing emphasis on the nonsovereign manner in which citizenship is being experienced vis-à-vis migration.