Citizenship is often understood in straightforward legal terms, but it also represents a set of practices that constitute a change in the relationship between citizens and the nation-state, and the way society is governed. While citizenship was historically associated with urban societies, the promotion of national forms of citizenship from the late 18th century onward meant that citizenship rights were also extended to rural dwellers. From a Foucauldian governmentality perspective, such processes have been associated with the emergence of new advanced liberal governmentalities of rule, accompanied by techniques for thinking about, and acting upon, the objects and subjects of government. Where previously, citizenship was construed, in socia...
Modern citizenship is constructed historically from a set of contributory rights and duties that are...
Item does not contain fulltextIn today's world, citizenship is increasingly defined in normative ter...
The contributions to this special issue of Citizenship Studies generally understand citizenship as r...
Citizenship is often understood in straightforward legal terms, but it also represents a set of prac...
Citizenship is often understood in straightforward legal terms, but it also represents a set of prac...
Modern political thought has bequeathed two conceptions of citizenship, one leading to a conception ...
The recent surge of theoretical interest in citizenship has been shaped in important ways by a growi...
Citizenship is most commonly defined as a legal standing that connotes membership in a national poli...
Citizenship is an idea with many meanings and dimensions. It is often defined barely, as a formal st...
Citizenship in this chapter means membership of a state. Nationhood means membership of a “nation”, ...
<div class="page" title="Page 41"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p><span>The paper dea...
<p>The concept of citizenship is central to European history and has great resonance. It does howeve...
textabstractNation states are premised on the legitimizing presence of a polity comprised of citizen...
Citizenship has long been referred to in the context of a nation-state membership. Various alternati...
In recent discussions on ‘citizenship’, the concept is oddly dealt with as if it would have originat...
Modern citizenship is constructed historically from a set of contributory rights and duties that are...
Item does not contain fulltextIn today's world, citizenship is increasingly defined in normative ter...
The contributions to this special issue of Citizenship Studies generally understand citizenship as r...
Citizenship is often understood in straightforward legal terms, but it also represents a set of prac...
Citizenship is often understood in straightforward legal terms, but it also represents a set of prac...
Modern political thought has bequeathed two conceptions of citizenship, one leading to a conception ...
The recent surge of theoretical interest in citizenship has been shaped in important ways by a growi...
Citizenship is most commonly defined as a legal standing that connotes membership in a national poli...
Citizenship is an idea with many meanings and dimensions. It is often defined barely, as a formal st...
Citizenship in this chapter means membership of a state. Nationhood means membership of a “nation”, ...
<div class="page" title="Page 41"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p><span>The paper dea...
<p>The concept of citizenship is central to European history and has great resonance. It does howeve...
textabstractNation states are premised on the legitimizing presence of a polity comprised of citizen...
Citizenship has long been referred to in the context of a nation-state membership. Various alternati...
In recent discussions on ‘citizenship’, the concept is oddly dealt with as if it would have originat...
Modern citizenship is constructed historically from a set of contributory rights and duties that are...
Item does not contain fulltextIn today's world, citizenship is increasingly defined in normative ter...
The contributions to this special issue of Citizenship Studies generally understand citizenship as r...