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Citizenship

2011
Normative theorizing about citizenship has been dominated by three different models—the republican, the legal, and the liberal democratic—reflecting respectively the civic experiences of city republics, empires, and nation-states. The first two originated in ancient Greece and Rome.
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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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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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The tensions between Indigenous sovereignty and multicultural citizenship education: Toward an anticolonial approach to civic education

Theory & Research in Social Education, 2019
Indigenous studies complicates and advances existing notions of citizenship education, in particular, by making visible ongoing legacies of colonialism and foregrounding Indigenous sovereignty.
Leilani Sabzalian
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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 Bankowski, Emilios Christodoulidis
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Global Citizenship

Encyclopedia of the UN Sustainable Development Goals, 2018
This article draws attention to the keyword “global citizenship” through an analysis of the ambiguity of expectations of teachers from the Ontario curriculum documents.
Roman Gerodimos
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Flexible Citizenship

, 1999
Contents Acknowledgements Introduction Flexible citizenship: the cultural logics of transnationality Part 1 Emerging modernities 1 The geopolitics of cultural knowledge 2 A "momentary glow of fraternity" Part 2 Regimes and strategies 3 Fengshui and the ...
Aihwa Ong
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Citizenship in practice

British Journal of Social Psychology, 2004
The idea of citizenship dates back to classical antiquity. It was originally concerned to address legitimacy of occupancy in the public sphere. Our empirical study contributes to the project of developing a social psychology of the citizen by focusing on the dynamics of such membership, specifically rights and identities. The authors briefly describe a
Barnes, Rebecca   +2 more
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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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Citizenship and Dignity

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2013
Theories of dignity have to navigate between two conceptions: the egalitarian idea of human dignity and the old idea of dignitas, connected with hierarchy, rank, and office. One possible way of bridging the gap between the two is to talk of the dignity of the citizen.
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