Kenneth Stahl argues that many countries such as the United States already have a form of “citizenship federalism,” in which local (not specifically urban) citizenship, based on residence, exists alongside national citizenship, rooted in nationality. </p
This paper scrutinizes the paradox of the increasing objective yet diminishing subjective value of c...
[Extract] The nation state is a construct that emerged in the era of the industriar revolution. The ...
An odd and somewhat disquieting feature of citizenship talk in the academy is its oscillation betwee...
A majority of the world population lives in cities, but determining citizenship remains a monopoly o...
This chapter focuses on citizenship as an increasingly important aspect of the relationship between ...
Citizenship in this chapter means membership of a state. Nationhood means membership of a “nation”, ...
In a way, the question of urban citizenship is easy. If a state were to give non-citizens citizenshi...
In an age of transnational flows and interdependencies, democratic citizenship cannot be conceptuali...
During the last decades, the rapid changes of the global political and economic scenario that caused...
The contributions to this special issue of Citizenship Studies generally understand citizenship as r...
The concept of citizenship poses an interesting asymmetry: though all citizens receive the same righ...
Citizenship has long been referred to in the context of a nation-state membership. Various alternati...
Citizenship is often understood in straightforward legal terms, but it also represents a set of prac...
In his kick-off, Rainer Bauböck discusses the influence of citizenship, both urban and national, on ...
This essay highlights recent state and local policies relating to immigrants and the respects in whi...
This paper scrutinizes the paradox of the increasing objective yet diminishing subjective value of c...
[Extract] The nation state is a construct that emerged in the era of the industriar revolution. The ...
An odd and somewhat disquieting feature of citizenship talk in the academy is its oscillation betwee...
A majority of the world population lives in cities, but determining citizenship remains a monopoly o...
This chapter focuses on citizenship as an increasingly important aspect of the relationship between ...
Citizenship in this chapter means membership of a state. Nationhood means membership of a “nation”, ...
In a way, the question of urban citizenship is easy. If a state were to give non-citizens citizenshi...
In an age of transnational flows and interdependencies, democratic citizenship cannot be conceptuali...
During the last decades, the rapid changes of the global political and economic scenario that caused...
The contributions to this special issue of Citizenship Studies generally understand citizenship as r...
The concept of citizenship poses an interesting asymmetry: though all citizens receive the same righ...
Citizenship has long been referred to in the context of a nation-state membership. Various alternati...
Citizenship is often understood in straightforward legal terms, but it also represents a set of prac...
In his kick-off, Rainer Bauböck discusses the influence of citizenship, both urban and national, on ...
This essay highlights recent state and local policies relating to immigrants and the respects in whi...
This paper scrutinizes the paradox of the increasing objective yet diminishing subjective value of c...
[Extract] The nation state is a construct that emerged in the era of the industriar revolution. The ...
An odd and somewhat disquieting feature of citizenship talk in the academy is its oscillation betwee...