The lecture is about how citizenship should be understood and conceptualized in liberal and plural societies. The main questions is: what is good citizenship and what kind of political identity should be protected. There will be a discussion of the difference between liberal and republican conceptions and a critical David Miller’s claim that democratic welfare states need to be supported by national identity. Keywords: Citizenship, Liberalism, Republicanism, National identity
The concept of citizenship is ambiguous. It is sometimes understood as nationalitè (state citizenshi...
Citizenship is a notoriously complex and an essentially contested concept which has been defined in ...
Individual identity is defined by unique traits and is constructed from the diversity of human being...
The lecture is about how citizenship should be understood and conceptualized in liberal and plural s...
The first problem which emerges when trying to define what citizenship education means is that citiz...
Citizenship and national identities are central elements of political systems. They account for the ...
Citizenship in this chapter means membership of a state. Nationhood means membership of a “nation”, ...
Citizenship and Identity provides an introduction to key debates in sociology and social and politic...
Since the beginning of the twenty-first century, citizenship education has been revived as a theoret...
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...
In my ‘Citizenship and Capitalism’ (Turner 1986) and ‘Outline of a Theory of Citizenship’ Turner (19...
WOS: 000412499000011Citizenship is about belonging to a group or community and about the rights and ...
The general aim of the article is to describe the infl uence of diverse interpretations of citizensh...
Modern political thought has bequeathed two conceptions of citizenship, one leading to a conception ...
The concept of citizenship is ambiguous. It is sometimes understood as nationalitè (state citizenshi...
Citizenship is a notoriously complex and an essentially contested concept which has been defined in ...
Individual identity is defined by unique traits and is constructed from the diversity of human being...
The lecture is about how citizenship should be understood and conceptualized in liberal and plural s...
The first problem which emerges when trying to define what citizenship education means is that citiz...
Citizenship and national identities are central elements of political systems. They account for the ...
Citizenship in this chapter means membership of a state. Nationhood means membership of a “nation”, ...
Citizenship and Identity provides an introduction to key debates in sociology and social and politic...
Since the beginning of the twenty-first century, citizenship education has been revived as a theoret...
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...
In my ‘Citizenship and Capitalism’ (Turner 1986) and ‘Outline of a Theory of Citizenship’ Turner (19...
WOS: 000412499000011Citizenship is about belonging to a group or community and about the rights and ...
The general aim of the article is to describe the infl uence of diverse interpretations of citizensh...
Modern political thought has bequeathed two conceptions of citizenship, one leading to a conception ...
The concept of citizenship is ambiguous. It is sometimes understood as nationalitè (state citizenshi...
Citizenship is a notoriously complex and an essentially contested concept which has been defined in ...
Individual identity is defined by unique traits and is constructed from the diversity of human being...