A majority of the world population lives in cities, but determining citizenship remains a monopoly of nation-states. Should cities claim their own citizenship, based on residence rather than nationality? Should they get enhanced powers and bypass states when addressing challenges of migration or climate change? Or would urban citizenship deepen the political divide between metropolitan and rural populations that disintegrates liberal democracies today? These questions are raised in Rainer Bauböck’s kickoff for a GLOBALCIT Forum that was also published on Verfassungsblog. 22 authors respond to these questions and reflect on the prospects for urban and local citizenship. The forum concludes with a rejoinder by Rainer Bauböck
Irregular migrants tend to live in dense urban settings. Cities respond to this phenomenon with a va...
What goes underexplored in Bauböck’s commentary is the relationship of citizenship to sovereignty. A...
Challenging the authority of the State, many municipalities around the world have decided to remedy ...
Since the first decade of the millennium – for the first time in human history – more people are liv...
In a way, the question of urban citizenship is easy. If a state were to give non-citizens citizenshi...
In his kick-off, Rainer Bauböck discusses the influence of citizenship, both urban and national, on ...
It seems urgent that “urban citizenship” is properly characterised to understand not only the rights...
In recent years, the concept of ‘urban citizenship’ has become an important reference for cities and...
Global migration has reached historic levels affecting every single country in the world. One of the...
ABSTRACT The two foundational subjects for membership in the modern nation-state, the citizen and th...
The assumption is that nation-states often undervalue potential immigrants and that cities would bet...
The twenty-two responses to Rainer Bauböck’s proposal for strengthening urban citizenship sugg...
I will take Rainer Bauböck’s closing words as my point of departure and offer an answer that i...
Nir Barak deepens the ambivalence in Rainer Bauböck’s account of urban citizenship and suggests a sk...
Kenneth Stahl argues that many countries such as the United States already have a form of “citizensh...
Irregular migrants tend to live in dense urban settings. Cities respond to this phenomenon with a va...
What goes underexplored in Bauböck’s commentary is the relationship of citizenship to sovereignty. A...
Challenging the authority of the State, many municipalities around the world have decided to remedy ...
Since the first decade of the millennium – for the first time in human history – more people are liv...
In a way, the question of urban citizenship is easy. If a state were to give non-citizens citizenshi...
In his kick-off, Rainer Bauböck discusses the influence of citizenship, both urban and national, on ...
It seems urgent that “urban citizenship” is properly characterised to understand not only the rights...
In recent years, the concept of ‘urban citizenship’ has become an important reference for cities and...
Global migration has reached historic levels affecting every single country in the world. One of the...
ABSTRACT The two foundational subjects for membership in the modern nation-state, the citizen and th...
The assumption is that nation-states often undervalue potential immigrants and that cities would bet...
The twenty-two responses to Rainer Bauböck’s proposal for strengthening urban citizenship sugg...
I will take Rainer Bauböck’s closing words as my point of departure and offer an answer that i...
Nir Barak deepens the ambivalence in Rainer Bauböck’s account of urban citizenship and suggests a sk...
Kenneth Stahl argues that many countries such as the United States already have a form of “citizensh...
Irregular migrants tend to live in dense urban settings. Cities respond to this phenomenon with a va...
What goes underexplored in Bauböck’s commentary is the relationship of citizenship to sovereignty. A...
Challenging the authority of the State, many municipalities around the world have decided to remedy ...