This Article takes up the question of “who counts?” with a three-part argument. The first part of the argument makes the case that citizenship in liberal democracies is subject to stresses caused by internal doctrinal conflict that result in the creation of semi-citizenship statuses that offer some individuals partial bundles of rights and semi-citizen statuses. Semi-citizenship is inevitable. The second part of the argument looks closely at how this affects the distribution of the political rights of citizenship: voting and representation. I make the argument that we ought not conflate voting and representation. Each is a distinct political right. People who cannot vote or do not vote are not necessarily entirely unrepresented. This is par...
The core substantive principle of democracy is that those subject to the law should have a voice in ...
A growing chorus of scholars laments the apparent decline of political participation in America, and...
A growing chorus of scholars laments the apparent decline of political participation in America, and...
This Article takes up the question of “who counts?” with a three-part argument. The first part of th...
This article addresses two central topics in normative debates on transnational citizenship: the inc...
ABSTRACT This article addresses the subject of children’s citizenship in liberal democracies. While ...
The paper first analyses the concept of citizenship throughout history, illustrating how the concept...
The question of immigrants’ access to citizenship and the attendant right of political participation...
The liberal notion of citizenship provides equality to all citizens, without regard to ascriptive or...
Print Publication Date: Aug 2017 - Online Publication Date: Sep 2017The chapter focuses on citizensh...
This thesis is an investigation into the concept of citizenship, or, more precisely, the core conce...
The article focuses on multiple citizenship from the theoretical perspective in an attempt to seize ...
This article addresses two central topics in normative debates on transnational citizenship: the inc...
Citizenship scholarship is pervasively organized around a binary concept: there is citizenship (whi...
While many political theorists have focused on the question of whether states have a duty to grant c...
The core substantive principle of democracy is that those subject to the law should have a voice in ...
A growing chorus of scholars laments the apparent decline of political participation in America, and...
A growing chorus of scholars laments the apparent decline of political participation in America, and...
This Article takes up the question of “who counts?” with a three-part argument. The first part of th...
This article addresses two central topics in normative debates on transnational citizenship: the inc...
ABSTRACT This article addresses the subject of children’s citizenship in liberal democracies. While ...
The paper first analyses the concept of citizenship throughout history, illustrating how the concept...
The question of immigrants’ access to citizenship and the attendant right of political participation...
The liberal notion of citizenship provides equality to all citizens, without regard to ascriptive or...
Print Publication Date: Aug 2017 - Online Publication Date: Sep 2017The chapter focuses on citizensh...
This thesis is an investigation into the concept of citizenship, or, more precisely, the core conce...
The article focuses on multiple citizenship from the theoretical perspective in an attempt to seize ...
This article addresses two central topics in normative debates on transnational citizenship: the inc...
Citizenship scholarship is pervasively organized around a binary concept: there is citizenship (whi...
While many political theorists have focused on the question of whether states have a duty to grant c...
The core substantive principle of democracy is that those subject to the law should have a voice in ...
A growing chorus of scholars laments the apparent decline of political participation in America, and...
A growing chorus of scholars laments the apparent decline of political participation in America, and...