On the basis of the case studies collected in this special issue, the paper analyses what is philosophically at stake in public discourses and policies about citizenship revocation, and why the latter cur- rently acts as a borderline case with regard to liberal democracy. Firstly, we ask whether, beyond an intensification of internal ten- sions, the destabilizing effects attached to the revival of citizenship revocation conjure up dilemmas which imply a possible exit from liberal democracy or, at least, a decoupling between liberalism and democracy. Investigating this possible shift from tensions to dilem- mas, we underline that the liberal dimension of citizenship, based on individual rights, has lost importance in setting out the condi- t...
Philosophical discussion about citizenship has traditionally focused on the questions of what citize...
Our current understanding of citizenship is grounded in our culture of individualism and results in ...
Citizenship in liberal democracies has, until recently, been theorized as conferring equal legal sta...
On the basis of the case studies collected in this special issue, the paper analyses what is philoso...
On the basis of the case studies collected in this special issue, the paper analyses what is philoso...
This chapter sheds some light on why and how citizenship revocation currently acts as a bor- derline...
When States Take Rights Back draws on contributions by international experts in history, law, politi...
The tension between citizenship and democracy is well documented in the literature on citizenship. T...
In many countries across the world, citizenship revocation policies are back on the political agenda...
This thesis aims to develop a critique of liberal notions of citizenship as they have been applied i...
In recent years, due to the threat of terrorism, there has been a return of banishment, in contempor...
With the post-war expansion of the welfare state, which provided a material basis for the adoption o...
The recent surge of theoretical interest in citizenship has been shaped in important ways by a growi...
The right to strip citizenship from (denaturalise) those deemed disloyal or dangerous is a significa...
The contributions to this special issue of Citizenship Studies generally understand citizenship as r...
Philosophical discussion about citizenship has traditionally focused on the questions of what citize...
Our current understanding of citizenship is grounded in our culture of individualism and results in ...
Citizenship in liberal democracies has, until recently, been theorized as conferring equal legal sta...
On the basis of the case studies collected in this special issue, the paper analyses what is philoso...
On the basis of the case studies collected in this special issue, the paper analyses what is philoso...
This chapter sheds some light on why and how citizenship revocation currently acts as a bor- derline...
When States Take Rights Back draws on contributions by international experts in history, law, politi...
The tension between citizenship and democracy is well documented in the literature on citizenship. T...
In many countries across the world, citizenship revocation policies are back on the political agenda...
This thesis aims to develop a critique of liberal notions of citizenship as they have been applied i...
In recent years, due to the threat of terrorism, there has been a return of banishment, in contempor...
With the post-war expansion of the welfare state, which provided a material basis for the adoption o...
The recent surge of theoretical interest in citizenship has been shaped in important ways by a growi...
The right to strip citizenship from (denaturalise) those deemed disloyal or dangerous is a significa...
The contributions to this special issue of Citizenship Studies generally understand citizenship as r...
Philosophical discussion about citizenship has traditionally focused on the questions of what citize...
Our current understanding of citizenship is grounded in our culture of individualism and results in ...
Citizenship in liberal democracies has, until recently, been theorized as conferring equal legal sta...