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Citizenship and Nationhood

2017
Citizenship in this chapter means membership of a state. Nationhood means membership of a “nation”, which is a particular type of cultural and/or ethnic collective. I first set out the reasons that liberals and anti-liberals have given for making citizenship and nationhood coterminous.
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Sexuality and Citizenship

Sociology, 1998
The tradition of thinking behind the idea of citizenship, which has become a key concept of modern social theory, has given insufficient attention to either gender or sexuality. In this paper it is argued that claims to citizenship status, at least in the West, are closely associated with the institutionalisation of hetero-sexual, as well as male ...
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Affective citizenship

2019
The chapter introduces the concept of affective citizenship as an innovative and promising avenue to explore and revisit the relationship between states and subjects in contemporary societies. In contrast to the bulk of research that has rather neglected the affective and emotional dimensions of citizenship, this concept departs from the rationalist ...
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Citizenship Bound and Citizenship Unbound

1999
An important reason why the notion of citizenship has generated such theoretical interest and debate in recent years is because it rests on the precarious junction of ‘membership’ and ‘participation’. The difficulties with which the concept is fraught bear witness to this tension.
Zenon Bańkowski   +1 more
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Citizenship training: Recovering citizenship

II Seven International Education Congress
The research analyzes how the Young Apprentice Program improves the quality of life and social integration of adolescents, considering their cultural, family and school contexts. Young people experience improvements in self-esteem, behavior and communication, in addition to achieving better integration into the job market.
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Citizenship By Degree

2018
Since the mid-twentieth century, the United States has seen a striking shift in the gender dynamics of higher educational attainment as women have come to earn college degrees at higher rates than men. Women have also made significant strides in terms of socioeconomic status and political engagement.
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Academic Citizenship

2019
Academic citizenship can be defined as the service that academics carry out to benefit the higher education institution they belong to, the scientific community, and the wider society. Academic citizenship, also called service, is necessary for university functioning and development as well as for reinforcing the connections of universities to the ...
Maria Rita Tagliaventi   +2 more
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Education for Citizenship

British Journal of Educational Studies, 1991
(1991). Education for citizenship. British Journal of Educational Studies: Vol. 39, No. 4, pp. 373-385.
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Citizenship and the Technopoles

Javnost - The Public, 1997
AbstractIn a world in which people are increasingly identified as consumers and audiences, it is more important than every to invoke them as citizens. Citizenship elevates human activity to include legal, political, and social rights to participate fully in a democratic society.
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Norms of Citizenship

2009
Abstract This article discusses the normative aspects of citizenship or the support for the ‘norms of citizenship’. The norms discussed in the article refer to the image of a ‘good citizen’, which is characterized by the acceptance of such norms being active in politics and public life.
Deth, Jan W. van   +1 more
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