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Wikipedia

Citizenship

Citizenship is the enjoyment by a natural person of civil and political rights of a polity, as well as the incurring of duties, which are not afforded to non-citizens.[1]

Though citizenship is often legally conflated with nationality in today's Anglo-Saxon world,[2][3][4] international law does not usually use the term citizenship to refer to nationality,[5][6] these two notions being conceptually different dimensions of collective membership.[7]

Generally citizenships have no expiration and allow persons to work, reside and vote in the polity, as well as identify with the polity, possibly acquiring a passport. Though through discriminatory laws, like disfranchisement and outright apartheid citizens have been made second-class citizens. Historically, populations of states were mostly subjects,[1] while citizenship was a particular status which originated in the rights of urban populations, like the rights of the male public of cities and republics, particularly ancient city-states, giving rise to a civitas and the social class of the burgher or bourgeoisie. Since then states have expanded the status of citizenship to most of their national people, while the extent of citizen rights remain contested.

Definition edit

Conceptually citizenship and nationality are different dimensions of state membership. Citizenship is focused on the internal political life of the state and nationality is the dimension of state membership in international law.[8] Article 15 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights states that everyone has the right to nationality.[9] As such nationality in international law can be called and understood as citizenship,[9] or more generally as subject or belonging to a sovereign state, and not as ethnicity. This notwithstanding, around 10 million people are stateless.[9]

In the contemporary era, the concept of full citizenship encompasses not only active political rights, but full civil rights and social rights.[10]

Historically, the most significant difference between a national and a citizen is that the citizen has the right to vote for elected officials, and the right to be elected.[10] This distinction between full citizenship and other, lesser relationships goes back to antiquity. Until the 19th and 20th centuries, it was typical for only a certain percentage of people who belonged to the state to be considered as full citizens. In the past, a number of people were excluded from citizenship on the basis of sex, socioeconomic class, ethnicity, religion, and other factors. However, they held a legal relationship with their government akin to the modern concept of nationality.[10]

Determining factors edit

A person can be recognized as a citizen on a number of bases.

  • Nationality. Nationality and citizenship are generally indissociable, citizenship being in most cases a consequence of nationality.[11]
  • Place of residence. In some countries, foreign residents have citizenship rights and can vote.[11]
  • Citizenship by honorary conferment. This type of citizenship is conferred to an individual as a sign of honour.[12]
  • Excluded categories. In most countries, minors are not considered as full citizens. In the past, there have been exclusions on entitlement to citizenship on grounds such as skin color, ethnicity, sex, land ownership status, and free status (not being a slave). Most of these exclusions no longer apply in most places. Modern examples include some Gulf countries which rarely grant citizenship to non-Muslims, e.g. Qatar is known for granting citizenship to foreign athletes, but they all have to profess the Islamic faith in order to receive citizenship. The United States grants citizenship to those born as a result of reproductive technologies, and internationally adopted children born after February 27, 1983. Some exclusions still persist for internationally adopted children born before February 27, 1983, even though their parents meet citizenship criteria.

Responsibilities of a citizen edit

Every citizen has obligations that are required by law and some responsibilities that benefit the community. Obeying the laws of a country and paying taxes are some of the obligations required of citizens by law. Voting and community services form part of responsibilities of a citizen that benefits the community.[13]

The Constitution of Ghana (1992), Article 41, obligates citizens to promote the prestige and good name of Ghana and respect the symbols of Ghana. Examples of national symbols includes the Ghanaian flag, coat of arms, money, and state sword. These national symbols must be treated with respect and high esteem by citizens since they best represent Ghanaians.[14]

Apart from responsibilities, citizens also have rights. Some of the rights are the right to pursue life, liberty and happiness, the right to worship, right to run for elected office and right to express oneself.

Polis edit

Many thinkers such as Giorgio Agamben in his work extending the biopolitical framework of Foucault's History of Sexuality in the book, Homo Sacer,[15] point to the concept of citizenship beginning in the early city-states of ancient Greece, although others see it as primarily a modern phenomenon dating back only a few hundred years and, for humanity, that the concept of citizenship arose with the first laws. Polis meant both the political assembly of the city-state as well as the entire society.[16] Citizenship concept has generally been identified as a western phenomenon.[17] There is a general view that citizenship in ancient times was a simpler relation than modern forms of citizenship, although this view has come under scrutiny.[18] The relation of citizenship has not been a fixed or static relation but constantly changed within each society, and that according to one view, citizenship might "really have worked" only at select periods during certain times, such as when the Athenian politician Solon made reforms in the early Athenian state.[19] Citizenship was also contingent on a variety of biopolitical assemblages, such as the bioethics of emerging Theo-Philosophical traditions. It was necessary to fit Aristotle's definition of the besouled (the animate) to obtain citizenship: neither the sacred olive tree nor spring would have any rights.

An essential part of the framework of Greco-Roman ethics is the figure of Homo Sacer or the bare life.

Historian Geoffrey Hosking in his 2005 Modern Scholar lecture course suggested that citizenship in ancient Greece arose from an appreciation for the importance of freedom.[20] Hosking explained:

It can be argued that this growth of slavery was what made Greeks particularly conscious of the value of freedom. After all, any Greek farmer might fall into debt and therefore might become a slave, at almost any time ... When the Greeks fought together, they fought in order to avoid being enslaved by warfare, to avoid being defeated by those who might take them into slavery. And they also arranged their political institutions so as to remain free men.

— Geoffrey Hosking, 2005[20]
 
Geoffrey Hosking suggests that fear of being enslaved was a central motivating force for the development of the Greek sense of citizenship. Sculpture: a Greek woman being served by a slave-child.

Slavery permitted slave-owners to have substantial free time and enabled participation in public life.[20] Polis citizenship was marked by exclusivity. Inequality of status was widespread; citizens (πολίτης politēs < πόλις 'city') had a higher status than non-citizens, such as women, slaves, and resident foreigners (metics).[21][22] The first form of citizenship was based on the way people lived in the ancient Greek times, in small-scale organic communities of the polis. The obligations of citizenship were deeply connected to one's everyday life in the polis. These small-scale organic communities were generally seen as a new development in world history, in contrast to the established ancient civilizations of Egypt or Persia, or the hunter-gatherer bands elsewhere. From the viewpoint of the ancient Greeks, a person's public life could not be separated from their private life, and Greeks did not distinguish between the two worlds according to the modern western conception. The obligations of citizenship were deeply connected with everyday life. To be truly human, one had to be an active citizen to the community, which Aristotle famously expressed: "To take no part in the running of the community's affairs is to be either a beast or a god!" This form of citizenship was based on the obligations of citizens towards the community, rather than rights given to the citizens of the community. This was not a problem because they all had a strong affinity with the polis; their own destiny and the destiny of the community were strongly linked. Also, citizens of the polis saw obligations to the community as an opportunity to be virtuous, it was a source of honor and respect. In Athens, citizens were both rulers and ruled, important political and judicial offices were rotated and all citizens had the right to speak and vote in the political assembly.

Roman ideas edit

In the Roman Empire, citizenship expanded from small-scale communities to the entirety of the empire. Romans realized that granting citizenship to people from all over the empire legitimized Roman rule over conquered areas. Roman citizenship was no longer a status of political agency, as it had been reduced to a judicial safeguard and the expression of rule and law.[23] Rome carried forth Greek ideas of citizenship such as the principles of equality under the law, civic participation in government, and notions that "no one citizen should have too much power for too long",[24] but Rome offered relatively generous terms to its captives, including chances for lesser forms of citizenship.[24] If Greek citizenship was an "emancipation from the world of things",[25] the Roman sense increasingly reflected the fact that citizens could act upon material things as well as other citizens, in the sense of buying or selling property, possessions, titles, goods. One historian explained:

The person was defined and represented through his actions upon things; in the course of time, the term property came to mean, first, the defining characteristic of a human or other being; second, the relation which a person had with a thing; and third, the thing defined as the possession of some person.

Roman citizenship reflected a struggle between the upper-class patrician interests against the lower-order working groups known as the plebeian class.[24] A citizen came to be understood as a person "free to act by law, free to ask and expect the law's protection, a citizen of such and such a legal community, of such and such a legal standing in that community".[27] Citizenship meant having rights to have possessions, immunities, expectations, which were "available in many kinds and degrees, available or unavailable to many kinds of person for many kinds of reason".[27] The law itself was a kind of bond uniting people.[28] Roman citizenship was more impersonal, universal, multiform, having different degrees and applications.[28]

Middle Ages edit

During the European Middle Ages, citizenship was usually associated with cities and towns (see medieval commune), and applied mainly to middle-class folk. Titles such as burgher, grand burgher (German Großbürger) and the bourgeoisie denoted political affiliation and identity in relation to a particular locality, as well as membership in a mercantile or trading class; thus, individuals of respectable means and socioeconomic status were interchangeable with citizens.

During this era, members of the nobility had a range of privileges above commoners (see aristocracy), though political upheavals and reforms, beginning most prominently with the French Revolution, abolished privileges and created an egalitarian concept of citizenship.

Renaissance edit

During the Renaissance, people transitioned from being subjects of a king or queen to being citizens of a city and later to a nation.[29]: p.161  Each city had its own law, courts, and independent administration.[30] And being a citizen often meant being subject to the city's law in addition to having power in some instances to help choose officials.[30] City dwellers who had fought alongside nobles in battles to defend their cities were no longer content with having a subordinate social status but demanded a greater role in the form of citizenship.[31] Membership in guilds was an indirect form of citizenship in that it helped their members succeed financially.[32] The rise of citizenship was linked to the rise of republicanism, according to one account, since independent citizens meant that kings had less power. [33] Citizenship became an idealized, almost abstract, concept,[19] and did not signify a submissive relation with a lord or count, but rather indicated the bond between a person and the state in the rather abstract sense of having rights and duties.[19]

Modern times edit

The modern idea of citizenship still respects the idea of political participation, but it is usually done through "elaborate systems of political representation at a distance" such as representative democracy.[18] Modern citizenship is much more passive; action is delegated to others; citizenship is often a constraint on acting, not an impetus to act.[18] Nevertheless, citizens are usually aware of their obligations to authorities and are aware that these bonds often limit what they can do.[18]

United States edit

 
Portrait of Dred Scott, the plaintiff in the infamous Dred Scott v. Sandford case at the Supreme Court of the United States, commissioned by a "group of Negro citizens" and presented to the Missouri Historical Society, St. Louis, in 1888

From 1790 until the mid-twentieth century, United States law used racial criteria to establish citizenship rights and regulate who was eligible to become a naturalized citizen.[34] The Naturalization Act of 1790, the first law in U.S. history to establish rules for citizenship and naturalization, barred citizenship to all people who were not of European descent, stating that "any alien being a free white person, who shall have resided within the limits and under the jurisdiction of the United States for the term of two years, maybe admitted to becoming a citizen thereof."[35]

Under early U.S. laws, African Americans were not eligible for citizenship. In 1857, these laws were upheld in the US Supreme Court case Dred Scott v. Sandford, which ruled that "a free negro of the African race, whose ancestors were brought to this country and sold as slaves, is not a 'citizen' within the meaning of the Constitution of the United States," and that "the special rights and immunities guaranteed to citizens do not apply to them."[36]

It was not until the abolition of slavery following the American Civil War that African Americans were granted citizenship rights. The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, ratified on July 9, 1868, stated that "all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside."[37] Two years later, the Naturalization Act of 1870 would extend the right to become a naturalized citizen to include "aliens of African nativity and to persons of African descent".[38]

Despite the gains made by African Americans after the Civil War, Native Americans, Asians, and others not considered "free white persons" were still denied the ability to become citizens. The 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act explicitly denied naturalization rights to all people of Chinese origin, while subsequent acts passed by the US Congress, such as laws in 1906, 1917, and 1924, would include clauses that denied immigration and naturalization rights to people based on broadly defined racial categories.[39] Supreme Court cases such as Ozawa v. the United States (1922) and U.S. v. Bhagat Singh Thind (1923), would later clarify the meaning of the phrase "free white persons," ruling that ethnically Japanese, Indian, and other non-European people were not "white persons", and were therefore ineligible for naturalization under U.S. law.

Native Americans were not granted full US citizenship until the passage of the Indian Citizenship Act in 1924. However, even well into the 1960s, some state laws prevented Native Americans from exercising their full rights as citizens, such as the right to vote. In 1962, New Mexico became the last state to enfranchise Native Americans.[40]

It was not until the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 that the racial and gender restrictions for naturalization were explicitly abolished. However, the act still contained restrictions regarding who was eligible for US citizenship and retained a national quota system which limited the number of visas given to immigrants based on their national origin, to be fixed "at a rate of one-sixth of one percent of each nationality's population in the United States in 1920".[41] It was not until the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 that these immigration quota systems were drastically altered in favor of a less discriminatory system.

Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics edit

The 1918 constitution of revolutionary Russia granted citizenship to any foreigners who were living within the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, so long as they were "engaged in work and [belonged] to the working class."[42] It recognized "the equal rights of all citizens, irrespective of their racial or national connections" and declared oppression of any minority group or race "to be contrary to the fundamental laws of the Republic." The 1918 constitution also established the right to vote and be elected to soviets for both men and women "irrespective of religion, nationality, domicile, etc. [...] who shall have completed their eighteenth year by the day of the election."[43] The later constitutions of the USSR would grant universal Soviet citizenship to the citizens of all member republics[44][45] in concord with the principles of non-discrimination laid out in the original 1918 constitution of Russia.

Nazi Germany edit

Nazism, the German variant of twentieth-century fascism, classified inhabitants of the country into three main hierarchical categories, each of which would have different rights in relation to the state: citizens, subjects, and aliens. The first category, citizens, were to possess full civic rights and responsibilities. Citizenship was conferred only on males of German (or so-called "Aryan") heritage who had completed military service, and could be revoked at any time by the state. The Reich Citizenship Law of 1935 established racial criteria for citizenship in the German Reich, and because of this law Jews and others who could not "prove German racial heritage" were stripped of their citizenship.[46]

The second category, subjects, referred to all others who were born within the nation's boundaries who did not fit the racial criteria for citizenship. Subjects would have no voting rights, could not hold any position within the state, and possessed none of the other rights and civic responsibilities conferred on citizens. All women were to be conferred "subject" status upon birth, and could only obtain "citizen" status if they worked independently or if they married a German citizen (see women in Nazi Germany).

The final category, aliens, referred to those who were citizens of another state, who also had no rights.

In 2021, the German government passed Article 116 (2) of the Basic Law, which entitles the restoration of citizenship to individuals who had their German citizenship revoked "on political, racial, or religious grounds" between 30 January 1933 and 8 May 1945. This also entitles their descendants to German citizenship.[47]

Israel edit

The primary principles of Israeli citizenship is jus sanguinis (citizenship by descent) for Jews and jus soli (citizenship by place of birth) for others.[48]

Different senses edit

Many theorists suggest that there are two opposing conceptions of citizenship: an economic one, and a political one. For further information, see History of citizenship. Citizenship status, under social contract theory, carries with it both rights and duties. In this sense, citizenship was described as "a bundle of rights -- primarily, political participation in the life of the community, the right to vote, and the right to receive certain protection from the community, as well as obligations."[49] Citizenship is seen by most scholars as culture-specific, in the sense that the meaning of the term varies considerably from culture to culture, and over time.[18] In China, for example, there is a cultural politics of citizenship which could be called "peopleship", argued by an academic article.[50]

How citizenship is understood depends on the person making the determination. The relation of citizenship has never been fixed or static, but constantly changes within each society. While citizenship has varied considerably throughout history, and within societies over time, there are some common elements but they vary considerably as well. As a bond, citizenship extends beyond basic kinship ties to unite people of different genetic backgrounds. It usually signifies membership in a political body. It is often based on or was a result of, some form of military service or expectation of future service. It usually involves some form of political participation, but this can vary from token acts to active service in government.

Citizenship is a status in society. It is an ideal state as well. It generally describes a person with legal rights within a given political order. It almost always has an element of exclusion, meaning that some people are not citizens and that this distinction can sometimes be very important, or not important, depending on a particular society. Citizenship as a concept is generally hard to isolate intellectually and compare with related political notions since it relates to many other aspects of society such as the family, military service, the individual, freedom, religion, ideas of right, and wrong, ethnicity, and patterns for how a person should behave in society.[29] When there are many different groups within a nation, citizenship may be the only real bond that unites everybody as equals without discrimination—it is a "broad bond" linking "a person with the state" and gives people a universal identity as a legal member of a specific nation.[51]

Modern citizenship has often been looked at as two competing underlying ideas:[52]

  • The liberal-individualist or sometimes liberal conception of citizenship suggests that citizens should have entitlements necessary for human dignity.[53] It assumes people act for the purpose of enlightened self-interest. According to this viewpoint, citizens are sovereign, morally autonomous beings with duties to pay taxes, obey the law, engage in business transactions, and defend the nation if it comes under attack,[53] but are essentially passive politically,[52] and their primary focus is on economic betterment. This idea began to appear around the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and became stronger over time, according to one view.[19] According to this formulation, the state exists for the benefit of citizens and has an obligation to respect and protect the rights of citizens, including civil rights and political rights.[19] It was later that so-called social rights became part of the obligation for the state.[19]
  • The civic-republican or sometimes classical or civic humanist conception of citizenship emphasizes man's political nature and sees citizenship as an active process, not a passive state or legal marker.[52] It is relatively more concerned that government will interfere with popular places to practice citizenship in the public sphere. Citizenship means being active in government affairs.[53] According to one view, most people today live as citizens according to the liberal-individualist conception but wished they lived more according to the civic-republican ideal.[52] An ideal citizen is one who exhibits "good civic behavior".[19] Free citizens and a republic government are "mutually interrelated."[19] Citizenship suggested a commitment to "duty and civic virtue".[19]

Responsibilities of citizens

Responsibility is an action that individuals of a state or country must take note of in the interest of a common good. These responsibilities can be categorised into personal and civic responsibilities.[54]

Scholars suggest that the concept of citizenship contains many unresolved issues, sometimes called tensions, existing within the relation, that continue to reflect uncertainty about what citizenship is supposed to mean.[19] Some unresolved issues regarding citizenship include questions about what is the proper balance between duties and rights.[19] Another is a question about what is the proper balance between political citizenship versus social citizenship.[19] Some thinkers see benefits with people being absent from public affairs, since too much participation such as revolution can be destructive, yet too little participation such as total apathy can be problematic as well.[19] Citizenship can be seen as a special elite status, and it can also be seen as a democratizing force and something that everybody has; the concept can include both senses.[19] According to sociologist Arthur Stinchcombe, citizenship is based on the extent that a person can control one's own destiny within the group in the sense of being able to influence the government of the group.[29]: p.150  One last distinction within citizenship is the so-called consent descent distinction, and this issue addresses whether citizenship is a fundamental matter determined by a person choosing to belong to a particular nation––by their consent––or is citizenship a matter of where a person was born––that is, by their descent.[21]

International edit

Some intergovernmental organizations have extended the concept and terminology associated with citizenship to the international level,[55] where it is applied to the totality of the citizens of their constituent countries combined. Citizenship at this level is a secondary concept, with rights deriving from national citizenship.

European Union edit

The Maastricht Treaty introduced the concept of citizenship of the European Union. Article 17 (1) of the Treaty on European Union[56] stated that:

Citizenship of the Union is hereby established. Every person holding the nationality of a Member State shall be a citizen of the Union. Citizenship of the Union shall be additional to and not replace national citizenship.[57]

An agreement is known as the amended EC Treaty[57] established certain minimal rights for European Union citizens. Article 12 of the amended EC Treaty guaranteed a general right of non-discrimination within the scope of the Treaty. Article 18 provided a limited right to free movement and residence in the Member States other than that of which the European Union citizen is a national. Articles 18-21 and 225 provide certain political rights.

Union citizens have also extensive rights to move in order to exercise economic activity in any of the Member States[58] which predate the introduction of Union citizenship.[59]

Mercosur edit

Citizenship of the Mercosur is granted to eligible citizens of the Southern Common Market member states. It was approved in 2010 through the Citizenship Statute and should be fully implemented by the member countries in 2021 when the program will be transformed in an international treaty incorporated into the national legal system of the countries, under the concept of "Mercosur Citizen".[citation needed]

Commonwealth edit

 
Citizenship ceremony on beach near Cooktown, Queensland. 2012

The concept of "Commonwealth Citizenship" has been in place ever since the establishment of the Commonwealth of Nations. As with the EU, one holds Commonwealth citizenship only by being a citizen of a Commonwealth member state. This form of citizenship offers certain privileges within some Commonwealth countries:

  • Some such countries do not require tourist visas of citizens of other Commonwealth countries or allow some Commonwealth citizens to stay in the country for tourism purposes without a visa for longer than citizens of other countries.
  • In some Commonwealth countries, resident citizens of other Commonwealth countries are entitled to political rights, e.g., the right to vote in local and national elections and in some cases even the right to stand for election.
  • In some instances the right to work in any position (including the civil service) is granted, except for certain specific positions, such as in the defense departments, Governor-General or President or Prime Minister.
  • In the United Kingdom, all Commonwealth citizens legally residing in the country can vote and stand for office at all elections.

Although Ireland was excluded from the Commonwealth in 1949 because it declared itself a republic, Ireland is generally treated as if it were still a member. Legislation often specifically provides for equal treatment between Commonwealth countries and Ireland and refers to "Commonwealth countries and Ireland".[60] Ireland's citizens are not classified as foreign nationals in the United Kingdom.

Canada departed from the principle of nationality being defined in terms of allegiance in 1921. In 1935 the Irish Free State was the first to introduce its own citizenship. However, Irish citizens were still treated as subjects of the Crown, and they are still not regarded as foreign, even though Ireland is not a member of the Commonwealth.[61] The Canadian Citizenship Act of 1946 provided for a distinct Canadian Citizenship, automatically conferred upon most individuals born in Canada, with some exceptions, and defined the conditions under which one could become a naturalized citizen. The concept of Commonwealth citizenship was introduced in 1948 in the British Nationality Act 1948. Other dominions adopted this principle such as New Zealand, by way of the British Nationality and New Zealand Citizenship Act 1948.

Subnational edit

 
Diagram of relationship between; Citizens, Politicians + Laws

Citizenship most usually relates to membership of the nation-state, but the term can also apply at the subnational level. Subnational entities may impose requirements, of residency or otherwise, which permit citizens to participate in the political life of that entity or to enjoy benefits provided by the government of that entity. But in such cases, those eligible are also sometimes seen as "citizens" of the relevant state, province, or region. An example of this is how the fundamental basis of Swiss citizenship is a citizenship of an individual commune, from which follows citizenship of a canton and of the Confederation. Another example is Åland where the residents enjoy special provincial citizenship within Finland, hembygdsrätt.

The United States has a federal system in which a person is a citizen of their specific state of residence, such as New York or California, as well as a citizen of the United States. State constitutions may grant certain rights above and beyond what is granted under the United States Constitution and may impose their own obligations including the sovereign right of taxation and military service; each state maintains at least one military force subject to national militia transfer service, the state's national guard, and some states maintain a second military force not subject to nationalization.

Education edit

"Active citizenship" is the philosophy that citizens should work towards the betterment of their community through economic participation, public, volunteer work, and other such efforts to improve life for all citizens. In this vein, citizenship education is taught in schools, as an academic subject in some countries. By the time children reach secondary education there is an emphasis on such unconventional subjects to be included in an academic curriculum. While the diagram on citizenship to the right is rather facile and depthless, it is simplified to explain the general model of citizenship that is taught to many secondary school pupils. The idea behind this model within education is to instill in young pupils that their actions (i.e. their vote) affect collective citizenship and thus in turn them.

Republic of Ireland edit

It is taught in the Republic of Ireland as an exam subject for the Junior Certificate. It is known as Civic, Social and Political Education (CSPE). A new Leaving Certificate exam subject with the working title 'Politics & Society' is being developed by the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NCCA) and is expected to be introduced to the curriculum sometime after 2012.[62]

United Kingdom edit

Citizenship is offered as a General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) course in many schools in the United Kingdom. As well as teaching knowledge about democracy, parliament, government, the justice system, human rights and the UK's relations with the wider world, students participate in active citizenship, often involving a social action or social enterprise in their local community.

  • Citizenship is a compulsory subject of the National Curriculum in state schools in England for all pupils aged 11–16. Some schools offer a qualification in this subject at GCSE and A level. All state schools have a statutory requirement to teach the subject, assess pupil attainment and report student's progress in citizenship to parents.[63]
  • In Wales the model used is personal and social education.[64][65]
  • Citizenship is not taught as a discrete subject in Scottish schools, but is a cross-curricular strand of the Curriculum for Excellence. However they do teach a subject called "Modern Studies" which covers the social, political and economic study of local, national and international issues.[66]
  • Citizenship is taught as a standalone subject in all state schools in Northern Ireland and most other schools in some forms from year 8 to 10 prior to GCSEs. Components of Citizenship are then also incorporated into GCSE courses such as 'Learning for Life and Work'.

Criticism edit

The concept of citizenship is criticized by open borders advocates, who argue that it functions as a caste, feudal, or apartheid system in which people are assigned dramatically different opportunities based on the accident of birth. It is also criticized by some libertarians, especially anarcho-capitalists. In 1987, moral philosopher Joseph Carens argued that "citizenship in Western liberal democracies is the modern equivalent of feudal privilege—an inherited status that greatly enhances one's life chances. Like feudal birthright privileges, restrictive citizenship is hard to justify when one thinks about it closely".[67][68][69]

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Leydet, Dominique (2006-10-13). "Citizenship". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 2023-10-03.
  2. ^ "Citizenship and Participation — Manual for Human Rights Education with Young people". Manual for Human Rights Education with Young people. 2011-08-23. Retrieved 2023-10-03.
  3. ^ Votruba, Martin. . Slovak Studies Program. University of Pittsburgh. Archived from the original on 2014-09-25. Retrieved 2013-04-23.
  4. ^ Nationality and Statelessness: A Handbook for Parliamentarians (PDF). UNHCR and IPU. 2005. Retrieved 2020-07-16.
  5. ^ "International Migration Law No. 34 - Glossary on Migration" (PDF). International Organization for Migration: 143–144. 2019-06-19. ISSN 1813-2278.
  6. ^ Rütte, Barbara von (2022-12-19), "Citizenship and Nationality: Terms, Concepts and Rights", The Human Right to Citizenship, Brill Nijhoff, pp. 11–57, ISBN 978-90-04-51752-3, retrieved 2023-11-27
  7. ^ Sassen, Saskia (2002). "17. Towards Post-National and Denationalized Citizenship". In Isin, Engin F.; Turner, Bryan S. (eds.). Handbook of Citizenship Studies. SAGE Publications. p. 278. ISBN 978-0-7619-6858-0. from the original on 2021-09-30. Retrieved 2016-05-06.
  8. ^ Sassen, Saskia (2002). "17. Towards Post-National and Denationalized Citizenship". In Isin, Engin F.; Turner, Bryan S. (eds.). Handbook of Citizenship Studies. SAGE Publications. p. 278. ISBN 978-0-7619-6858-0. from the original on 2021-09-30. Retrieved 2016-05-06. Today the terms citizenship and nationality both refer to the national state. In a technical legal sense, while essentially the same concept, each term reflects a different legal framework. Both identify the legal status of an individual in terms of state membership. But citizenship is largely confined to the national dimension, while nationality refers to the international legal dimension in the context of an interstate system.
  9. ^ a b c "CITIZENSHIP & NATIONALITY". International Justice Resource Center (IJRC). 15 November 2012. from the original on 2022-01-19. Retrieved 2020-07-07.
  10. ^ a b c Kadelbach, Stefan (2007). "Part V: Citizenship Rights in Europe". In Ehlers, Dirk (ed.). European Fundamental Rights and Freedoms. Berlin: De Gruyter Recht. pp. 547–548. ISBN 9783110971965. from the original on 2021-03-08. Retrieved 2016-05-06.
  11. ^ a b Koubi, Geneviève (1994-12-31). De la citoyenneté (in French). FeniXX réédition numérique. ISBN 978-2-402-10208-7.
  12. ^ keypoint (2022-09-14). "TYPES OF CITIZENSHIP — Civic Keypoint". keypoint. Retrieved 2023-05-06.
  13. ^ "ROLES, RIGHTS & RESPONSIBILITIES OF CITIZENS" (PDF). Retrieved 10 May 2023.
  14. ^ "Know your duties as a citizen of Ghana". National Commission for Civic Education. 5 July 2021. Retrieved 10 May 2023.
  15. ^ Agamben, G.; Heller-Roazen, D. (1998). Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life. Meridian: Crossing Aesthetics. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-3218-5. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  16. ^ Pocock 1998, p. 32.
  17. ^ Zarrow 1997, p. 4.
  18. ^ a b c d e Isin, Engin F.; Turner, Bryan S., eds. (2002). Handbook of Citizenship Studies. Chapter 5 -- David Burchell -- Ancient Citizenship and its Inheritors; Chapter 6 -- Rogers M. Smith -- Modern Citizenship. London: Sage. pp. 89–104, 105. ISBN 978-0-7619-6858-0.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Heater 2004, p. [page needed]
  20. ^ a b c Hosking, Geoffrey (2005). Epochs of European Civilization: Antiquity to Renaissance. Lecture 3: Ancient Greece. United Kingdom: The Modern Scholar via Recorded Books. pp. 1, 2 (tracks). ISBN 978-1-4025-8360-5.
  21. ^ a b Hebert, Yvonne M., ed. (2002). Citizenship in transformation in Canada. chapters by Veronica Strong-Boag, Yvonne Hebert, Lori Wilkinson. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 3, 4, 5. ISBN 978-0-8020-0850-3.
  22. ^ Pocock 1998, p. 33.
  23. ^ See Civis Romanus sum.
  24. ^ a b c Hosking, Geoffrey (2005). Epochs of European Civilization: Antiquity to Renaissance. Lecture 5: Rome as a city-state. United Kingdom: The Modern Scholar via Recorded Books. pp. tracks 1 through 9. ISBN 978-1-4025-8360-5.
  25. ^ Pocock 1998, p. 35.
  26. ^ Pocock 1998, p. 36.
  27. ^ a b Pocock 1998, p. 37.
  28. ^ a b Pocock 1998, p. 38.
  29. ^ a b c Taylor, David (1994). Turner, Bryan; Hamilton, Peter (eds.). Citizenship: Critical Concepts. United States and Canada: Routledge. pp. 476 pages total. ISBN 978-0-415-07036-2.
  30. ^ a b Weber 1998, p. 44.
  31. ^ Weber 1998, p. 46.
  32. ^ Weber 1998, pp. 46–47.
  33. ^ Zarrow 1997, p. 3.
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  42. ^ "Article 2 (R.S.F.S.R. Constitution)". www.marxists.org. Retrieved Mar 5, 2023.
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  46. ^ "The Nuremberg Laws: The Reich Citizenship Law (September 15, 1935)". Jewish Virtual Library.
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  49. ^ Leary, Virginia (2000). "Citizenship. Human rights, and Diversity". In Cairns, Alan C.; Courtney, John C.; MacKinnon, Peter; Michelmann, Hans J.; Smith, David E. (eds.). Citizenship, Diversity, and Pluralism: Canadian and Comparative Perspectives. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. pp. 247–264. ISBN 978-0-7735-1893-3. The concept of 'citizenship' has long acquired the connotation of a bundle of rights...
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  52. ^ a b c d Beiner, Ronald, ed. (1995). Theorizing Citizenship. J. G. A. Pocock, Michael Ignatieff. US: State University of New York, Albany. pp. 29, 54. ISBN 978-0-7914-2335-6.
  53. ^ a b c Oldfield, Adrian (1994). Turner, Bryan; Hamilton, Peter (eds.). Citizenship: Critical Concepts. United States and Canada: Routledge. pp. 476 pages total, source: The Political Quarterly, 1990 vol.61, pp. 177–187, in the book, pages 188+. ISBN 9780415102452.
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  56. ^ Note: the consolidated version.
  57. ^ a b "Consolidated versions of the Treaty on European Union". eur-lex.europa.eu. Retrieved Mar 5, 2023.
  58. ^ Note: Articles 39, 43, 49 EC.
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Further reading edit

  • Weber, Max (1998). Citizenship in Ancient and Medieval Cities. Chapter 3. Minneapolis, MN: The University of Minnesota. pp. 43–49. ISBN 978-0-8166-2880-3.
  • Zarrow, Peter (1997), Fogel, Joshua A.; Zarrow, Peter G. (eds.), Imagining the People: Chinese Intellectuals and the Concept of Citizenship, 1890-1920, Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, p. 3, ISBN 978-0-7656-0098-1
  • Lawrance, Benjamin N.; Stevens, Jacqueline, eds. (February 2017). Citizenship in Question: Evidentiary Birthright and Statelessness. Duke University Press. ISBN 9780822362913.
  • Mann, Jatinder, ed. (October 12, 2023). Citizenship in Transnational Perspective: Australia, Canada, and Aotearoa New Zealand. Politics of Citizenship and Migration Series (2nd ed.). Springer International Publishing. ISBN 9783031343575.
  • Parker, Kunal M. (5 September 2015). Making Foreigners: Immigration and Citizenship Law in America, 1600-2000. New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9781139343282. ISBN 9781139343282.
  • Bosniak, Linda (September 28, 2023). The Citizen and the Alien: Dilemmas of Contemporary Membership. Princeton, New Jersey, USA: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691138282. JSTOR j.ctt7s254.
  • Kochenov, Dimitry (November 12, 2019). Citizenship. MIT Press Essential Knowledge Series. The MIT Press. ISBN 9780262537797.
  • Pocock, J. G. A. (1998). Shafir, Gershon (ed.). The Citizenship Debates. Chapter 2 -- The Ideal of Citizenship since Classical Times (originally published in Queen's Quarterly 99, no. 1). Minneapolis, MN: The University of Minnesota. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-8166-2880-3.
  • Archibugi, Daniele (2008). The Global Commonwealth of Citizens. Toward Cosmopolitan Democracy. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-4008-2976-7.
  • Brooks, Thom (2016). Becoming British: UK Citizenship Examined. Biteback.
  • Beaven, Brad, and John Griffiths. "Creating the Exemplary Citizen: The Changing Notion of Citizenship in Britain 1870–1939," Contemporary British History (2008) 22#2 pp 203–225 doi:10.1080/13619460701189559
  • Carens, Joseph (2000). Culture, Citizenship, and Community: A Contextual Exploration of Justice as Evenhandedness. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-829768-0.
  • Heater, Derek (2004). A Brief History of Citizenship. NYU Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-3672-2.
  • Howard-Hassmann, Rhoda E.; Walton-Roberts, Margaret (2015). The Human Right to Citizenship: A Slippery Concept. Pennsylvania Studies in Human Rights Series. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 9780812247176.
  • Kymlicka, Will (1995). Multicultural Citizenship: A Liberal Theory of Minority Rights. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-829091-9.
  • Maas, Willem (2007). Creating European Citizens. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-5486-3.
  • Marshall, T.H. (1950). Citizenship and Social Class and Other Essays. Cambridge University Press.
  • Shue, Henry (1950). Basic Rights.
  • Smith, Rogers (2003). Stories of Peoplehood: The Politics and Morals of Political Membership. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-52003-4.
  • Somers, Margaret (2008). Genealogies of Citizenship: Markets, Statelessness, and the Right to Have Rights. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-79394-0.
  • Soysal, Yasemin (1994). Limits of Citizenship. Migrants and Postnational Membership in Europe. University of Chicago Press.
  • Turner, Bryan S. (1994). Citizenship and Social Theory. Sage. ISBN 978-0-8039-8611-4.
  • Young, Iris Marion (January 1989). "Polity and group difference: A critique of the ideal of universal citizenship". Ethics. 99 (2): 250–274. doi:10.1086/293065. JSTOR 2381434. S2CID 54215809.
  • Leydet, Dominique (September 5, 2023) [October 13, 2006]. "Citizenship". In Zalta, Edward N.; Nodelman, Uri; et al. (eds.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2023 ed.). Metaphysics Research Lab, Standford University.

External links edit

  •   Quotations related to Citizenship at Wikiquote
  •   The dictionary definition of citizenship at Wiktionary
  •   Media related to Citizenship at Wikimedia Commons
  • BBC PSHE & Citizenship 2016-06-19 at the Wayback Machine
  • The Life in the UK Citizenship Test Report by Thom Brooks
  • Leydet, Dominique. "Citizenship". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • (PDF). United States Office of Personnel Management Investigations Service. March 2001. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-04-04. Retrieved 2007-03-07.

citizenship, citizen, redirects, here, other, uses, citizen, disambiguation, enjoyment, natural, person, civil, political, rights, polity, well, incurring, duties, which, afforded, citizens, though, citizenship, often, legally, conflated, with, nationality, to. Citizen redirects here For other uses see Citizen disambiguation Citizenship is the enjoyment by a natural person of civil and political rights of a polity as well as the incurring of duties which are not afforded to non citizens 1 Though citizenship is often legally conflated with nationality in today s Anglo Saxon world 2 3 4 international law does not usually use the term citizenship to refer to nationality 5 6 these two notions being conceptually different dimensions of collective membership 7 Generally citizenships have no expiration and allow persons to work reside and vote in the polity as well as identify with the polity possibly acquiring a passport Though through discriminatory laws like disfranchisement and outright apartheid citizens have been made second class citizens Historically populations of states were mostly subjects 1 while citizenship was a particular status which originated in the rights of urban populations like the rights of the male public of cities and republics particularly ancient city states giving rise to a civitas and the social class of the burgher or bourgeoisie Since then states have expanded the status of citizenship to most of their national people while the extent of citizen rights remain contested Contents 1 Definition 2 Determining factors 2 1 Responsibilities of a citizen 2 2 Polis 2 3 Roman ideas 2 4 Middle Ages 2 5 Renaissance 2 6 Modern times 2 6 1 United States 2 6 2 Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics 2 6 3 Nazi Germany 2 6 4 Israel 3 Different senses 4 International 4 1 European Union 4 2 Mercosur 4 3 Commonwealth 5 Subnational 6 Education 6 1 Republic of Ireland 6 2 United Kingdom 7 Criticism 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksDefinition editThis section is an excerpt from Nationality Nationality versus citizenship edit Conceptually citizenship and nationality are different dimensions of state membership Citizenship is focused on the internal political life of the state and nationality is the dimension of state membership in international law 8 Article 15 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights states that everyone has the right to nationality 9 As such nationality in international law can be called and understood as citizenship 9 or more generally as subject or belonging to a sovereign state and not as ethnicity This notwithstanding around 10 million people are stateless 9 In the contemporary era the concept of full citizenship encompasses not only active political rights but full civil rights and social rights 10 Historically the most significant difference between a national and a citizen is that the citizen has the right to vote for elected officials and the right to be elected 10 This distinction between full citizenship and other lesser relationships goes back to antiquity Until the 19th and 20th centuries it was typical for only a certain percentage of people who belonged to the state to be considered as full citizens In the past a number of people were excluded from citizenship on the basis of sex socioeconomic class ethnicity religion and other factors However they held a legal relationship with their government akin to the modern concept of nationality 10 Determining factors editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message A person can be recognized as a citizen on a number of bases Nationality Nationality and citizenship are generally indissociable citizenship being in most cases a consequence of nationality 11 Place of residence In some countries foreign residents have citizenship rights and can vote 11 Citizenship by honorary conferment This type of citizenship is conferred to an individual as a sign of honour 12 Excluded categories In most countries minors are not considered as full citizens In the past there have been exclusions on entitlement to citizenship on grounds such as skin color ethnicity sex land ownership status and free status not being a slave Most of these exclusions no longer apply in most places Modern examples include some Gulf countries which rarely grant citizenship to non Muslims e g Qatar is known for granting citizenship to foreign athletes but they all have to profess the Islamic faith in order to receive citizenship The United States grants citizenship to those born as a result of reproductive technologies and internationally adopted children born after February 27 1983 Some exclusions still persist for internationally adopted children born before February 27 1983 even though their parents meet citizenship criteria Responsibilities of a citizen edit Every citizen has obligations that are required by law and some responsibilities that benefit the community Obeying the laws of a country and paying taxes are some of the obligations required of citizens by law Voting and community services form part of responsibilities of a citizen that benefits the community 13 The Constitution of Ghana 1992 Article 41 obligates citizens to promote the prestige and good name of Ghana and respect the symbols of Ghana Examples of national symbols includes the Ghanaian flag coat of arms money and state sword These national symbols must be treated with respect and high esteem by citizens since they best represent Ghanaians 14 Apart from responsibilities citizens also have rights Some of the rights are the right to pursue life liberty and happiness the right to worship right to run for elected office and right to express oneself Main article History of citizenship Polis edit Main article Polis Many thinkers such as Giorgio Agamben in his work extending the biopolitical framework of Foucault s History of Sexuality in the book Homo Sacer 15 point to the concept of citizenship beginning in the early city states of ancient Greece although others see it as primarily a modern phenomenon dating back only a few hundred years and for humanity that the concept of citizenship arose with the first laws Polis meant both the political assembly of the city state as well as the entire society 16 Citizenship concept has generally been identified as a western phenomenon 17 There is a general view that citizenship in ancient times was a simpler relation than modern forms of citizenship although this view has come under scrutiny 18 The relation of citizenship has not been a fixed or static relation but constantly changed within each society and that according to one view citizenship might really have worked only at select periods during certain times such as when the Athenian politician Solon made reforms in the early Athenian state 19 Citizenship was also contingent on a variety of biopolitical assemblages such as the bioethics of emerging Theo Philosophical traditions It was necessary to fit Aristotle s definition of the besouled the animate to obtain citizenship neither the sacred olive tree nor spring would have any rights An essential part of the framework of Greco Roman ethics is the figure of Homo Sacer or the bare life Historian Geoffrey Hosking in his 2005 Modern Scholar lecture course suggested that citizenship in ancient Greece arose from an appreciation for the importance of freedom 20 Hosking explained It can be argued that this growth of slavery was what made Greeks particularly conscious of the value of freedom After all any Greek farmer might fall into debt and therefore might become a slave at almost any time When the Greeks fought together they fought in order to avoid being enslaved by warfare to avoid being defeated by those who might take them into slavery And they also arranged their political institutions so as to remain free men Geoffrey Hosking 2005 20 nbsp Geoffrey Hosking suggests that fear of being enslaved was a central motivating force for the development of the Greek sense of citizenship Sculpture a Greek woman being served by a slave child Slavery permitted slave owners to have substantial free time and enabled participation in public life 20 Polis citizenship was marked by exclusivity Inequality of status was widespread citizens poliths polites lt polis city had a higher status than non citizens such as women slaves and resident foreigners metics 21 22 The first form of citizenship was based on the way people lived in the ancient Greek times in small scale organic communities of the polis The obligations of citizenship were deeply connected to one s everyday life in the polis These small scale organic communities were generally seen as a new development in world history in contrast to the established ancient civilizations of Egypt or Persia or the hunter gatherer bands elsewhere From the viewpoint of the ancient Greeks a person s public life could not be separated from their private life and Greeks did not distinguish between the two worlds according to the modern western conception The obligations of citizenship were deeply connected with everyday life To be truly human one had to be an active citizen to the community which Aristotle famously expressed To take no part in the running of the community s affairs is to be either a beast or a god This form of citizenship was based on the obligations of citizens towards the community rather than rights given to the citizens of the community This was not a problem because they all had a strong affinity with the polis their own destiny and the destiny of the community were strongly linked Also citizens of the polis saw obligations to the community as an opportunity to be virtuous it was a source of honor and respect In Athens citizens were both rulers and ruled important political and judicial offices were rotated and all citizens had the right to speak and vote in the political assembly Roman ideas edit In the Roman Empire citizenship expanded from small scale communities to the entirety of the empire Romans realized that granting citizenship to people from all over the empire legitimized Roman rule over conquered areas Roman citizenship was no longer a status of political agency as it had been reduced to a judicial safeguard and the expression of rule and law 23 Rome carried forth Greek ideas of citizenship such as the principles of equality under the law civic participation in government and notions that no one citizen should have too much power for too long 24 but Rome offered relatively generous terms to its captives including chances for lesser forms of citizenship 24 If Greek citizenship was an emancipation from the world of things 25 the Roman sense increasingly reflected the fact that citizens could act upon material things as well as other citizens in the sense of buying or selling property possessions titles goods One historian explained The person was defined and represented through his actions upon things in the course of time the term property came to mean first the defining characteristic of a human or other being second the relation which a person had with a thing and third the thing defined as the possession of some person J G A Pocock 1998 26 Roman citizenship reflected a struggle between the upper class patrician interests against the lower order working groups known as the plebeian class 24 A citizen came to be understood as a person free to act by law free to ask and expect the law s protection a citizen of such and such a legal community of such and such a legal standing in that community 27 Citizenship meant having rights to have possessions immunities expectations which were available in many kinds and degrees available or unavailable to many kinds of person for many kinds of reason 27 The law itself was a kind of bond uniting people 28 Roman citizenship was more impersonal universal multiform having different degrees and applications 28 Middle Ages edit During the European Middle Ages citizenship was usually associated with cities and towns see medieval commune and applied mainly to middle class folk Titles such as burgher grand burgher German Grossburger and the bourgeoisie denoted political affiliation and identity in relation to a particular locality as well as membership in a mercantile or trading class thus individuals of respectable means and socioeconomic status were interchangeable with citizens During this era members of the nobility had a range of privileges above commoners see aristocracy though political upheavals and reforms beginning most prominently with the French Revolution abolished privileges and created an egalitarian concept of citizenship Renaissance edit During the Renaissance people transitioned from being subjects of a king or queen to being citizens of a city and later to a nation 29 p 161 Each city had its own law courts and independent administration 30 And being a citizen often meant being subject to the city s law in addition to having power in some instances to help choose officials 30 City dwellers who had fought alongside nobles in battles to defend their cities were no longer content with having a subordinate social status but demanded a greater role in the form of citizenship 31 Membership in guilds was an indirect form of citizenship in that it helped their members succeed financially 32 The rise of citizenship was linked to the rise of republicanism according to one account since independent citizens meant that kings had less power 33 Citizenship became an idealized almost abstract concept 19 and did not signify a submissive relation with a lord or count but rather indicated the bond between a person and the state in the rather abstract sense of having rights and duties 19 Modern times edit The modern idea of citizenship still respects the idea of political participation but it is usually done through elaborate systems of political representation at a distance such as representative democracy 18 Modern citizenship is much more passive action is delegated to others citizenship is often a constraint on acting not an impetus to act 18 Nevertheless citizens are usually aware of their obligations to authorities and are aware that these bonds often limit what they can do 18 United States edit Main article Citizenship of the United States nbsp Portrait of Dred Scott the plaintiff in the infamous Dred Scott v Sandford case at the Supreme Court of the United States commissioned by a group of Negro citizens and presented to the Missouri Historical Society St Louis in 1888From 1790 until the mid twentieth century United States law used racial criteria to establish citizenship rights and regulate who was eligible to become a naturalized citizen 34 The Naturalization Act of 1790 the first law in U S history to establish rules for citizenship and naturalization barred citizenship to all people who were not of European descent stating that any alien being a free white person who shall have resided within the limits and under the jurisdiction of the United States for the term of two years maybe admitted to becoming a citizen thereof 35 Under early U S laws African Americans were not eligible for citizenship In 1857 these laws were upheld in the US Supreme Court case Dred Scott v Sandford which ruled that a free negro of the African race whose ancestors were brought to this country and sold as slaves is not a citizen within the meaning of the Constitution of the United States and that the special rights and immunities guaranteed to citizens do not apply to them 36 It was not until the abolition of slavery following the American Civil War that African Americans were granted citizenship rights The 14th Amendment to the U S Constitution ratified on July 9 1868 stated that all persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside 37 Two years later the Naturalization Act of 1870 would extend the right to become a naturalized citizen to include aliens of African nativity and to persons of African descent 38 Despite the gains made by African Americans after the Civil War Native Americans Asians and others not considered free white persons were still denied the ability to become citizens The 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act explicitly denied naturalization rights to all people of Chinese origin while subsequent acts passed by the US Congress such as laws in 1906 1917 and 1924 would include clauses that denied immigration and naturalization rights to people based on broadly defined racial categories 39 Supreme Court cases such as Ozawa v the United States 1922 and U S v Bhagat Singh Thind 1923 would later clarify the meaning of the phrase free white persons ruling that ethnically Japanese Indian and other non European people were not white persons and were therefore ineligible for naturalization under U S law Native Americans were not granted full US citizenship until the passage of the Indian Citizenship Act in 1924 However even well into the 1960s some state laws prevented Native Americans from exercising their full rights as citizens such as the right to vote In 1962 New Mexico became the last state to enfranchise Native Americans 40 It was not until the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 that the racial and gender restrictions for naturalization were explicitly abolished However the act still contained restrictions regarding who was eligible for US citizenship and retained a national quota system which limited the number of visas given to immigrants based on their national origin to be fixed at a rate of one sixth of one percent of each nationality s population in the United States in 1920 41 It was not until the passage of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 that these immigration quota systems were drastically altered in favor of a less discriminatory system Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics edit Main article Soviet nationality law The 1918 constitution of revolutionary Russia granted citizenship to any foreigners who were living within the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic so long as they were engaged in work and belonged to the working class 42 It recognized the equal rights of all citizens irrespective of their racial or national connections and declared oppression of any minority group or race to be contrary to the fundamental laws of the Republic The 1918 constitution also established the right to vote and be elected to soviets for both men and women irrespective of religion nationality domicile etc who shall have completed their eighteenth year by the day of the election 43 The later constitutions of the USSR would grant universal Soviet citizenship to the citizens of all member republics 44 45 in concord with the principles of non discrimination laid out in the original 1918 constitution of Russia Nazi Germany edit Nazism the German variant of twentieth century fascism classified inhabitants of the country into three main hierarchical categories each of which would have different rights in relation to the state citizens subjects and aliens The first category citizens were to possess full civic rights and responsibilities Citizenship was conferred only on males of German or so called Aryan heritage who had completed military service and could be revoked at any time by the state The Reich Citizenship Law of 1935 established racial criteria for citizenship in the German Reich and because of this law Jews and others who could not prove German racial heritage were stripped of their citizenship 46 The second category subjects referred to all others who were born within the nation s boundaries who did not fit the racial criteria for citizenship Subjects would have no voting rights could not hold any position within the state and possessed none of the other rights and civic responsibilities conferred on citizens All women were to be conferred subject status upon birth and could only obtain citizen status if they worked independently or if they married a German citizen see women in Nazi Germany The final category aliens referred to those who were citizens of another state who also had no rights In 2021 the German government passed Article 116 2 of the Basic Law which entitles the restoration of citizenship to individuals who had their German citizenship revoked on political racial or religious grounds between 30 January 1933 and 8 May 1945 This also entitles their descendants to German citizenship 47 Israel edit Main article Israeli citizenship law The primary principles of Israeli citizenship is jus sanguinis citizenship by descent for Jews and jus soli citizenship by place of birth for others 48 Different senses editMany theorists suggest that there are two opposing conceptions of citizenship an economic one and a political one For further information see History of citizenship Citizenship status under social contract theory carries with it both rights and duties In this sense citizenship was described as a bundle of rights primarily political participation in the life of the community the right to vote and the right to receive certain protection from the community as well as obligations 49 Citizenship is seen by most scholars as culture specific in the sense that the meaning of the term varies considerably from culture to culture and over time 18 In China for example there is a cultural politics of citizenship which could be called peopleship argued by an academic article 50 How citizenship is understood depends on the person making the determination The relation of citizenship has never been fixed or static but constantly changes within each society While citizenship has varied considerably throughout history and within societies over time there are some common elements but they vary considerably as well As a bond citizenship extends beyond basic kinship ties to unite people of different genetic backgrounds It usually signifies membership in a political body It is often based on or was a result of some form of military service or expectation of future service It usually involves some form of political participation but this can vary from token acts to active service in government Citizenship is a status in society It is an ideal state as well It generally describes a person with legal rights within a given political order It almost always has an element of exclusion meaning that some people are not citizens and that this distinction can sometimes be very important or not important depending on a particular society Citizenship as a concept is generally hard to isolate intellectually and compare with related political notions since it relates to many other aspects of society such as the family military service the individual freedom religion ideas of right and wrong ethnicity and patterns for how a person should behave in society 29 When there are many different groups within a nation citizenship may be the only real bond that unites everybody as equals without discrimination it is a broad bond linking a person with the state and gives people a universal identity as a legal member of a specific nation 51 Modern citizenship has often been looked at as two competing underlying ideas 52 The liberal individualist or sometimes liberal conception of citizenship suggests that citizens should have entitlements necessary for human dignity 53 It assumes people act for the purpose of enlightened self interest According to this viewpoint citizens are sovereign morally autonomous beings with duties to pay taxes obey the law engage in business transactions and defend the nation if it comes under attack 53 but are essentially passive politically 52 and their primary focus is on economic betterment This idea began to appear around the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and became stronger over time according to one view 19 According to this formulation the state exists for the benefit of citizens and has an obligation to respect and protect the rights of citizens including civil rights and political rights 19 It was later that so called social rights became part of the obligation for the state 19 The civic republican or sometimes classical or civic humanist conception of citizenship emphasizes man s political nature and sees citizenship as an active process not a passive state or legal marker 52 It is relatively more concerned that government will interfere with popular places to practice citizenship in the public sphere Citizenship means being active in government affairs 53 According to one view most people today live as citizens according to the liberal individualist conception but wished they lived more according to the civic republican ideal 52 An ideal citizen is one who exhibits good civic behavior 19 Free citizens and a republic government are mutually interrelated 19 Citizenship suggested a commitment to duty and civic virtue 19 Further information Civic engagement Responsibilities of citizensResponsibility is an action that individuals of a state or country must take note of in the interest of a common good These responsibilities can be categorised into personal and civic responsibilities 54 Scholars suggest that the concept of citizenship contains many unresolved issues sometimes called tensions existing within the relation that continue to reflect uncertainty about what citizenship is supposed to mean 19 Some unresolved issues regarding citizenship include questions about what is the proper balance between duties and rights 19 Another is a question about what is the proper balance between political citizenship versus social citizenship 19 Some thinkers see benefits with people being absent from public affairs since too much participation such as revolution can be destructive yet too little participation such as total apathy can be problematic as well 19 Citizenship can be seen as a special elite status and it can also be seen as a democratizing force and something that everybody has the concept can include both senses 19 According to sociologist Arthur Stinchcombe citizenship is based on the extent that a person can control one s own destiny within the group in the sense of being able to influence the government of the group 29 p 150 One last distinction within citizenship is the so called consent descent distinction and this issue addresses whether citizenship is a fundamental matter determined by a person choosing to belong to a particular nation by their consent or is citizenship a matter of where a person was born that is by their descent 21 International editSee also Global citizenship Some intergovernmental organizations have extended the concept and terminology associated with citizenship to the international level 55 where it is applied to the totality of the citizens of their constituent countries combined Citizenship at this level is a secondary concept with rights deriving from national citizenship European Union edit Main article Citizenship of the European UnionThe Maastricht Treaty introduced the concept of citizenship of the European Union Article 17 1 of the Treaty on European Union 56 stated that Citizenship of the Union is hereby established Every person holding the nationality of a Member State shall be a citizen of the Union Citizenship of the Union shall be additional to and not replace national citizenship 57 An agreement is known as the amended EC Treaty 57 established certain minimal rights for European Union citizens Article 12 of the amended EC Treaty guaranteed a general right of non discrimination within the scope of the Treaty Article 18 provided a limited right to free movement and residence in the Member States other than that of which the European Union citizen is a national Articles 18 21 and 225 provide certain political rights Union citizens have also extensive rights to move in order to exercise economic activity in any of the Member States 58 which predate the introduction of Union citizenship 59 Mercosur edit Main article Citizenship of the Mercosur Citizenship of the Mercosur is granted to eligible citizens of the Southern Common Market member states It was approved in 2010 through the Citizenship Statute and should be fully implemented by the member countries in 2021 when the program will be transformed in an international treaty incorporated into the national legal system of the countries under the concept of Mercosur Citizen citation needed Commonwealth edit Main article Commonwealth citizen nbsp Citizenship ceremony on beach near Cooktown Queensland 2012The concept of Commonwealth Citizenship has been in place ever since the establishment of the Commonwealth of Nations As with the EU one holds Commonwealth citizenship only by being a citizen of a Commonwealth member state This form of citizenship offers certain privileges within some Commonwealth countries Some such countries do not require tourist visas of citizens of other Commonwealth countries or allow some Commonwealth citizens to stay in the country for tourism purposes without a visa for longer than citizens of other countries In some Commonwealth countries resident citizens of other Commonwealth countries are entitled to political rights e g the right to vote in local and national elections and in some cases even the right to stand for election In some instances the right to work in any position including the civil service is granted except for certain specific positions such as in the defense departments Governor General or President or Prime Minister In the United Kingdom all Commonwealth citizens legally residing in the country can vote and stand for office at all elections Although Ireland was excluded from the Commonwealth in 1949 because it declared itself a republic Ireland is generally treated as if it were still a member Legislation often specifically provides for equal treatment between Commonwealth countries and Ireland and refers to Commonwealth countries and Ireland 60 Ireland s citizens are not classified as foreign nationals in the United Kingdom Canada departed from the principle of nationality being defined in terms of allegiance in 1921 In 1935 the Irish Free State was the first to introduce its own citizenship However Irish citizens were still treated as subjects of the Crown and they are still not regarded as foreign even though Ireland is not a member of the Commonwealth 61 The Canadian Citizenship Act of 1946 provided for a distinct Canadian Citizenship automatically conferred upon most individuals born in Canada with some exceptions and defined the conditions under which one could become a naturalized citizen The concept of Commonwealth citizenship was introduced in 1948 in the British Nationality Act 1948 Other dominions adopted this principle such as New Zealand by way of the British Nationality and New Zealand Citizenship Act 1948 Subnational editMain article Subnational citizenship nbsp Diagram of relationship between Citizens Politicians LawsCitizenship most usually relates to membership of the nation state but the term can also apply at the subnational level Subnational entities may impose requirements of residency or otherwise which permit citizens to participate in the political life of that entity or to enjoy benefits provided by the government of that entity But in such cases those eligible are also sometimes seen as citizens of the relevant state province or region An example of this is how the fundamental basis of Swiss citizenship is a citizenship of an individual commune from which follows citizenship of a canton and of the Confederation Another example is Aland where the residents enjoy special provincial citizenship within Finland hembygdsratt The United States has a federal system in which a person is a citizen of their specific state of residence such as New York or California as well as a citizen of the United States State constitutions may grant certain rights above and beyond what is granted under the United States Constitution and may impose their own obligations including the sovereign right of taxation and military service each state maintains at least one military force subject to national militia transfer service the state s national guard and some states maintain a second military force not subject to nationalization Education editMain article Citizenship education subject Active citizenship is the philosophy that citizens should work towards the betterment of their community through economic participation public volunteer work and other such efforts to improve life for all citizens In this vein citizenship education is taught in schools as an academic subject in some countries By the time children reach secondary education there is an emphasis on such unconventional subjects to be included in an academic curriculum While the diagram on citizenship to the right is rather facile and depthless it is simplified to explain the general model of citizenship that is taught to many secondary school pupils The idea behind this model within education is to instill in young pupils that their actions i e their vote affect collective citizenship and thus in turn them Republic of Ireland edit It is taught in the Republic of Ireland as an exam subject for the Junior Certificate It is known as Civic Social and Political Education CSPE A new Leaving Certificate exam subject with the working title Politics amp Society is being developed by the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment NCCA and is expected to be introduced to the curriculum sometime after 2012 62 United Kingdom edit Citizenship is offered as a General Certificate of Secondary Education GCSE course in many schools in the United Kingdom As well as teaching knowledge about democracy parliament government the justice system human rights and the UK s relations with the wider world students participate in active citizenship often involving a social action or social enterprise in their local community Citizenship is a compulsory subject of the National Curriculum in state schools in England for all pupils aged 11 16 Some schools offer a qualification in this subject at GCSE and A level All state schools have a statutory requirement to teach the subject assess pupil attainment and report student s progress in citizenship to parents 63 In Wales the model used is personal and social education 64 65 Citizenship is not taught as a discrete subject in Scottish schools but is a cross curricular strand of the Curriculum for Excellence However they do teach a subject called Modern Studies which covers the social political and economic study of local national and international issues 66 Citizenship is taught as a standalone subject in all state schools in Northern Ireland and most other schools in some forms from year 8 to 10 prior to GCSEs Components of Citizenship are then also incorporated into GCSE courses such as Learning for Life and Work Criticism editThe concept of citizenship is criticized by open borders advocates who argue that it functions as a caste feudal or apartheid system in which people are assigned dramatically different opportunities based on the accident of birth It is also criticized by some libertarians especially anarcho capitalists In 1987 moral philosopher Joseph Carens argued that citizenship in Western liberal democracies is the modern equivalent of feudal privilege an inherited status that greatly enhances one s life chances Like feudal birthright privileges restrictive citizenship is hard to justify when one thinks about it closely 67 68 69 See also editCitizen s dividend Citizenship Studies Civic virtue Credit score Honorary citizenship Loss of citizenship Nationalism Non citizens Latvia Peoples Spatial citizenship Transnational citizenshipNotes editReferences edit a b Leydet Dominique 2006 10 13 Citizenship Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 2023 10 03 Citizenship and Participation Manual for Human Rights Education with Young people Manual for Human Rights Education with Young people 2011 08 23 Retrieved 2023 10 03 Votruba Martin Nationality ethnicity in Slovakia Slovak Studies Program University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on 2014 09 25 Retrieved 2013 04 23 Nationality and Statelessness A Handbook for Parliamentarians PDF UNHCR and IPU 2005 Retrieved 2020 07 16 International Migration Law No 34 Glossary on Migration PDF International Organization for Migration 143 144 2019 06 19 ISSN 1813 2278 Rutte Barbara von 2022 12 19 Citizenship and Nationality Terms Concepts and Rights The Human Right to Citizenship Brill Nijhoff pp 11 57 ISBN 978 90 04 51752 3 retrieved 2023 11 27 Sassen Saskia 2002 17 Towards Post National and Denationalized Citizenship In Isin Engin F Turner Bryan S eds Handbook of Citizenship Studies SAGE Publications p 278 ISBN 978 0 7619 6858 0 Archived from the original on 2021 09 30 Retrieved 2016 05 06 Sassen Saskia 2002 17 Towards Post National and Denationalized Citizenship In Isin Engin F Turner Bryan S eds Handbook of Citizenship Studies SAGE Publications p 278 ISBN 978 0 7619 6858 0 Archived from the original on 2021 09 30 Retrieved 2016 05 06 Today the terms citizenship and nationality both refer to the national state In a technical legal sense while essentially the same concept each term reflects a different legal framework Both identify the legal status of an individual in terms of state membership But citizenship is largely confined to the national dimension while nationality refers to the international legal dimension in the context of an interstate system a b c CITIZENSHIP amp NATIONALITY International Justice Resource Center IJRC 15 November 2012 Archived from the original on 2022 01 19 Retrieved 2020 07 07 a b c Kadelbach Stefan 2007 Part V Citizenship Rights in Europe In Ehlers Dirk ed European Fundamental Rights and Freedoms Berlin De Gruyter Recht pp 547 548 ISBN 9783110971965 Archived from the original on 2021 03 08 Retrieved 2016 05 06 a b Koubi Genevieve 1994 12 31 De la citoyennete in French FeniXX reedition numerique ISBN 978 2 402 10208 7 keypoint 2022 09 14 TYPES OF CITIZENSHIP Civic Keypoint keypoint Retrieved 2023 05 06 ROLES RIGHTS amp RESPONSIBILITIES OF CITIZENS PDF Retrieved 10 May 2023 Know your duties as a citizen of Ghana National Commission for Civic Education 5 July 2021 Retrieved 10 May 2023 Agamben G Heller Roazen D 1998 Homo Sacer Sovereign Power and Bare Life Meridian Crossing Aesthetics Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 3218 5 Retrieved 8 March 2023 Pocock 1998 p 32 Zarrow 1997 p 4 a b c d e Isin Engin F Turner Bryan S eds 2002 Handbook of Citizenship Studies Chapter 5 David Burchell Ancient Citizenship and its Inheritors Chapter 6 Rogers M Smith Modern Citizenship London Sage pp 89 104 105 ISBN 978 0 7619 6858 0 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Heater 2004 p page needed a b c Hosking Geoffrey 2005 Epochs of European Civilization Antiquity to Renaissance Lecture 3 Ancient Greece United Kingdom The Modern Scholar via Recorded Books pp 1 2 tracks ISBN 978 1 4025 8360 5 a b Hebert Yvonne M ed 2002 Citizenship in transformation in Canada chapters by Veronica Strong Boag Yvonne Hebert Lori Wilkinson Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 3 4 5 ISBN 978 0 8020 0850 3 Pocock 1998 p 33 See Civis Romanus sum a b c Hosking Geoffrey 2005 Epochs of European Civilization Antiquity to Renaissance Lecture 5 Rome as a city state United Kingdom The Modern Scholar via Recorded Books pp tracks 1 through 9 ISBN 978 1 4025 8360 5 Pocock 1998 p 35 Pocock 1998 p 36 a b Pocock 1998 p 37 a b Pocock 1998 p 38 a b c Taylor David 1994 Turner Bryan Hamilton Peter eds Citizenship Critical Concepts United States and Canada Routledge pp 476 pages total ISBN 978 0 415 07036 2 a b Weber 1998 p 44 Weber 1998 p 46 Weber 1998 pp 46 47 Zarrow 1997 p 3 A History of U S Citizenship The Los Angeles Times July 4 1997 Retrieved 21 September 2016 A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation U S Congressional Documents and Debates 1774 1875 The Library of Congress Retrieved 21 September 2016 Scott v Sandford Legal Information Institute Cornell University Law School 1857 Retrieved 21 September 2016 Constitution of the United States Amendment XIV The Charters of Freedom U S National Archives and Records Administration 1868 Retrieved 21 September 2016 Naturalization Act of 1870 Wikisource U S Congress 1917 Immigration Act US Immigration Legislation Online University of Washington Bothell Library Elections Native Americans Library of Congress The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 The McCarran Walter Act The Office of the Historian U S Department of State Article 2 R S F S R Constitution www marxists org Retrieved Mar 5 2023 Article 4 R S F S R Constitution www marxists org Retrieved Mar 5 2023 1936 Constitution of the USSR Part I www departments bucknell edu Retrieved Mar 5 2023 1936 Constitution of the USSR Part I www departments bucknell edu Retrieved Mar 5 2023 The Nuremberg Laws The Reich Citizenship Law September 15 1935 Jewish Virtual Library Amt Auswartiges Restoration of German citizenship Article 116 II Basic Law uk diplo de Retrieved 2022 05 31 Safran William 1997 07 01 Citizenship and Nationality in Democratic Systems Approaches to Defining and Acquiring Membership in the Political Community International Political Science Review SAGE Publishing 18 3 313 335 doi 10 1177 019251297018003006 S2CID 145476893 Leary Virginia 2000 Citizenship Human rights and Diversity In Cairns Alan C Courtney John C MacKinnon Peter Michelmann Hans J Smith David E eds Citizenship Diversity and Pluralism Canadian and Comparative Perspectives McGill Queen s Press MQUP pp 247 264 ISBN 978 0 7735 1893 3 The concept of citizenship has long acquired the connotation of a bundle of rights Xiao Y 2013 China s peopleship education Conceptual issues and policy analysis Citizenship Teaching and Learning 8 1 21 39 doi 10 1386 ctl 8 1 21 1 Gross Feliks 1999 Citizenship and ethnicity the growth and development of a democratic multiethnic institution Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press pp xi xii xiii 4 ISBN 978 0 313 30932 8 a b c d Beiner Ronald ed 1995 Theorizing Citizenship J G A Pocock Michael Ignatieff US State University of New York Albany pp 29 54 ISBN 978 0 7914 2335 6 a b c Oldfield Adrian 1994 Turner Bryan Hamilton Peter eds Citizenship Critical Concepts United States and Canada Routledge pp 476 pages total source The Political Quarterly 1990 vol 61 pp 177 187 in the book pages 188 ISBN 9780415102452 The Role of Civic Education civiced org Retrieved 2023 05 06 Daniele Archibugi The Global Commonwealth of Citizens Toward Cosmopolitan Democracy Princeton University Press Princeton 2008 Note the consolidated version a b Consolidated versions of the Treaty on European Union eur lex europa eu Retrieved Mar 5 2023 Note Articles 39 43 49 EC Violaine Hacker Citoyennete culturelle et politique europeenne des medias entre competitivite et promotion des valeurs NATIONS CULTURES ET ENTREPRISES EN EUROPE sous la direction de Gilles Rouet Collection Local et Global L Harmattan Paris pp 163 184 The Commonwealth Countries and Ireland Immunities and Privileges Amendment Order 2005 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2010 12 18 Murray v Parkes 1942 All ER 123 Leaving Certificate Politics and Society Report on the consultation process PDF March 2010 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 09 28 Retrieved 2012 01 19 National curriculum British Government Department for Children Schools and Families Retrieved 2009 02 02 NAFWC 13 2003 Personal and Social Education PSE and Work Related Education WRE in the Basic Curriculum Education WRE in the Basic Curriculum Welsh Assembly Government 15 June 2003 Archived from the original on 23 November 2011 Retrieved 2007 06 09 Personal and Social Education Framework Key Stages 1 to 4 in Wales Welsh Assembly Government Archived from the original on 2011 05 04 Retrieved 2007 06 09 Modern Studies Association Archived from the original on 2007 09 11 Retrieved 2007 08 09 Ochoa Espejo Paulina 2018 Why borders do matter morally The role of place in immigrants rights Constellations 25 1 71 86 doi 10 1111 1467 8675 12340 Vladimirovich Kochenov Dimitry 2020 Ending the passport apartheid The alternative to citizenship is no citizenship A reply International Journal of Constitutional Law 18 4 1525 1530 doi 10 1093 icon moaa108 Sacco Steven 2022 Abolishing Citizenship Resolving the Irreconcilability Between Soil and Blood Political Membership and Anti Racist Democracy Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 36 2 Further reading editWeber Max 1998 Citizenship in Ancient and Medieval Cities Chapter 3 Minneapolis MN The University of Minnesota pp 43 49 ISBN 978 0 8166 2880 3 Zarrow Peter 1997 Fogel Joshua A Zarrow Peter G eds Imagining the People Chinese Intellectuals and the Concept of Citizenship 1890 1920 Armonk NY M E Sharpe p 3 ISBN 978 0 7656 0098 1 Lawrance Benjamin N Stevens Jacqueline eds February 2017 Citizenship in Question Evidentiary Birthright and Statelessness Duke University Press ISBN 9780822362913 Mann Jatinder ed October 12 2023 Citizenship in Transnational Perspective Australia Canada and Aotearoa New Zealand Politics of Citizenship and Migration Series 2nd ed Springer International Publishing ISBN 9783031343575 Parker Kunal M 5 September 2015 Making Foreigners Immigration and Citizenship Law in America 1600 2000 New York NY USA Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9781139343282 ISBN 9781139343282 Bosniak Linda September 28 2023 The Citizen and the Alien Dilemmas of Contemporary Membership Princeton New Jersey USA Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691138282 JSTOR j ctt7s254 Kochenov Dimitry November 12 2019 Citizenship MIT Press Essential Knowledge Series The MIT Press ISBN 9780262537797 Pocock J G A 1998 Shafir Gershon ed The Citizenship Debates Chapter 2 The Ideal of Citizenship since Classical Times originally published in Queen s Quarterly 99 no 1 Minneapolis MN The University of Minnesota p 31 ISBN 978 0 8166 2880 3 Archibugi Daniele 2008 The Global Commonwealth of Citizens Toward Cosmopolitan Democracy Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 2976 7 Brooks Thom 2016 Becoming British UK Citizenship Examined Biteback Beaven Brad and John Griffiths Creating the Exemplary Citizen The Changing Notion of Citizenship in Britain 1870 1939 Contemporary British History 2008 22 2 pp 203 225 doi 10 1080 13619460701189559 Carens Joseph 2000 Culture Citizenship and Community A Contextual Exploration of Justice as Evenhandedness Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 829768 0 Heater Derek 2004 A Brief History of Citizenship NYU Press ISBN 978 0 8147 3672 2 Howard Hassmann Rhoda E Walton Roberts Margaret 2015 The Human Right to Citizenship A Slippery Concept Pennsylvania Studies in Human Rights Series University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 9780812247176 Kymlicka Will 1995 Multicultural Citizenship A Liberal Theory of Minority Rights Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 829091 9 Maas Willem 2007 Creating European Citizens Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7425 5486 3 Marshall T H 1950 Citizenship and Social Class and Other Essays Cambridge University Press Shue Henry 1950 Basic Rights Smith Rogers 2003 Stories of Peoplehood The Politics and Morals of Political Membership Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 52003 4 Somers Margaret 2008 Genealogies of Citizenship Markets Statelessness and the Right to Have Rights Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 79394 0 Soysal Yasemin 1994 Limits of Citizenship Migrants and Postnational Membership in Europe University of Chicago Press Turner Bryan S 1994 Citizenship and Social Theory Sage ISBN 978 0 8039 8611 4 Young Iris Marion January 1989 Polity and group difference A critique of the ideal of universal citizenship Ethics 99 2 250 274 doi 10 1086 293065 JSTOR 2381434 S2CID 54215809 Leydet Dominique September 5 2023 October 13 2006 Citizenship In Zalta Edward N Nodelman Uri et al eds Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2023 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Standford University External links edit nbsp Quotations related to Citizenship at Wikiquote nbsp The dictionary definition of citizenship at Wiktionary nbsp Media related to Citizenship at Wikimedia Commons BBC PSHE amp Citizenship Archived 2016 06 19 at the Wayback Machine The Life in the UK Citizenship Test Report by Thom Brooks Leydet Dominique Citizenship In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Citizenship Laws of the World PDF United States Office of Personnel Management Investigations Service March 2001 Archived from the original PDF on 2006 04 04 Retrieved 2007 03 07 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Citizenship amp oldid 1196780552, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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