Handbook of Citizenship Studies

Sprednja platnica
Engin F Isin, Bryan S Turner
SAGE, 2002 - 340 strani

From women's rights, civil rights, sexual rights for gays and lesbians, disability rights, and language rights, we have experienced in the past few decades a major trend in Western nation-states towards new claims for inclusion. This trend has echoed around the world: from the Zapatistas to Chechen and Kurdish nationalists, social and political movements are framing their struggles in the languages of rights and recognition, and hence, of citizenship.

Citizenship has thus become an increasingly important axis in the social sciences. Social scientists have been rethinking the role of political agent or subject. Not only are the rights and obligations of citizens being redefined, but also what it means to be a citizen has become an issue of central concern.

As the process of globalization produces multiple diasporas, we can expect increasingly complex relationships between homeland and host societies that will make the traditional idea of national citizenship problematic. As societies are forced to manage cultural difference and associated tensions and conflict, there will be changes in the processes by which states allocate citizenship and a differentiation of the category of citizen.

This book constitutes the most authoritative and comprehensive guide to the terrain. Drawing on a wealth of interdisciplinary knowledge, and including some of the leading commentators of the day, it is an essential guide to understanding modern citizenship.

 

Vsebina

Foundations of Rights
13
Variations and the Threat of Globalisation
53
Grounds of Social Change
69
Ancient Citizenship and its Inheritors
89
Modern Citizenship
105
Citizenship after Orientalism
117
Liberal Citizenship
131
Republican Citizenship
145
Sexual Citizenship
191
The Ambiguous Legacy
209
Cultural Citizenship
231
Multicultural Citizenship
245
The Elementary Forms of Citizenship
259
Towards PostNational and Denationalized Citizenship
277
Ecological Citizenship
293
Historical Images
305

Communitarianism and Citizenship
159
Amidst Political Theory
175
Cosmopolitan Citizenship
317
Index
333

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O avtorju (2002)

Bryan S. Turner is Professor of Sociology in the Asian Research Institute (ARI) at the National University of Singapore. Previously he was Professor of Sociology in the Faculty of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Cambridge from 1998-2005. His research interests include globalization and religion, concentrating on such issues as religious conflict and the modern state, religious authority and electronic information, religious, consumerism and youth cultures, human rights and religion, the human body, medical change, and religious cosmologies. He is Joint Chief Editor of the journal Citizenship Studies and serves on the editorial boards of several prestigious journals.

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