Nationality, Citizenship and Ethno-Cultural Belonging Preferential M
This book challenges mainstream arguments about the de-ethnicization of citizenship in Europe, offering a critical discussion of normative justifications for ethno-cultural citizenship and an original elaboration of principles of membership suitable for c
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Series Editors: Michele Michiletti is Lars Hierta Chair of Political Science at Stockholm University, Sweden. Ludvig Beckman is Professor of Political Science, Stockholm University, Sweden. David Owen is Professor of Social and Political Philosophy, University of Southampton, UK. The Editorial Board: Keith Banting (Queen’s University, Canada), Rainer Baubock (European University Institute, Italy), Russell Dalton (University of California at Irving, USA), Avigail Eisenberg (University of Victoria, Canada), Nancy Fraser (The New School for Social Research, USA), David Jacobson (University of South Florida, USA) and Ariadne Vromen (The University of Sydney, Australia). This book series focuses on citizenship transitions encompassing contemporary transformations of citizenship as institution, status and practice as well as normative and explanatory analysis of these transformations and their cultural, social, economic and political implications. The series bridges theoretical and empirical debates on democracy, transnationalism, and citizenship that have been too insulated from each other. It takes citizenship transitions as its startingpoint and studies the status, role and function of citizenship within contemporary democratic systems and multi-layered governance structures beyond the state. It aims to add a broader array of critical, conceptual, normative and empirical perspectives on the borders, territories, and political agents of citizenship. It scrutinizes the possibilities and challenges of citizenship in light of present broad processes of political fragmentation and pluralisation and the ways emerging ideals and expectations of citizenship are inspired by new social, political and environmental movements. Its cross-disciplinary approach intends to capture the transitions of citizenship from an apparently simple relation between the state and its citizens into a cluster of complex responsibility claims and practices that raise questions concerning citizenship borders and obligations, the public– private scope of citizenship, and even how political actors attempt to and in fact avoid citizenship. Titles in the series include: Ludvig Beckman and Eva Erman (editors) TERRITORIES OF CITIZENSHIP Costica Dumbrava NATIONALITY, CITIZENSHIP AND ETHNO-CULTURAL BELONGING Preferential Membership Policies in Europe
10.1057/9781137382085 - Nationality, Citizenship and Ethno-Cultural Belonging, Costica Dumbrava
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Palgrave Studies in Citizenship Transitions
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