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Nicolaidis, Kalypso
University Lecturer, University of Oxford and a Fellow at St Antony's College
Howse, Robert
Professor of Law, University of Michigan
Print publication date: 2001 (this edition)
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-924500-0 |
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doi:10.1093/0199245002.003.0015
Abstract: Some preliminary reflections are offered on the place of citizenship in a theory of federalism. Citizenship is one of the central concepts in political theory, and an account of citizenship, at the very least, defines the criteria for, and the method for the acquisition of, membership in a political community; more importantly, it also lays down the rights and responsibilities that attach to membership. The first section in this chapter makes the point that the three chapters following in this last section of the book further the debate on citizenship and federalism by invoking three different conceptions of citizenship, ethnocultural (Ch. 17), civic (Ch. 15), and economic (Ch. 16), which in turn express different underlying conceptions of political community; these different conceptions are discussed. The second section argues that the three chapters do not fully address the complication that federalism poses for citizenship, which is termed here the problem of divided, multiple or conflicting allegiances/loyalties; this is done by discussing conceptions of citizenship in the EU, and contrasting them with the situation in the USA.
Keywords: citizenship, civic citizenship, divided allegiances, economic citizenship, ethnocultural citizenship, EU, federalism, membership of a political community, multiple allegiances, political theory, responsibilities, rights, USA,
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