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Local Citizenship in a Global Age

Presents a distinctly local idea of citizenship that, with the advance of globalization, often conflicts with national citizenship.

Kenneth A. Stahl (Author)

9781107156463, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 14 May 2020

300 pages, 1 b/w illus. 2 tables
15 x 23 x 2 cm, 0.55 kg

'An extraordinarily timely and important book that makes us rethink the nature of citizenship. Stahl is thoughtful and careful, and his ideas are wildly provocative.' Christopher Serkin, Vanderbilt University, and author of The Law of Property

Although it is usually assumed that only the federal government can confer citizenship, localities often give residents who are noncitizens at the federal level the benefits of local citizenship: access to medical care, education, housing, security, labor and consumer markets, and even voting rights. In this work, Kenneth A. Stahl demonstrates that while the existence of these 'noncitizen citizens' has helped to reconcile competing commitments within liberal democracy to equality and community, the advance of globalization and the rise of nationalist political leaders like Donald Trump has caused local and federal citizenship to clash. For nationalists, localities' flexible approach to citizenship is a Trojan horse undermining state sovereignty from within, while liberals see local citizenship as the antidote to a reactionary ethnic nationalism. This book should be read by anyone who wants to understand why citizenship has become one of the most important issues in national politics today.

Introduction
Part I. Citizenship Federalism: 1. Three models of citizenship
2. Local and federal citizenship
3. A short history of local citizenship
Part II. 'Noncitizen Citizens': Three Case Studies of Local and Federal Citizenship: 4. Local citizenship and woman suffrage
5. Local citizenship for noncitizen residents
6. Local citizenship for nonresident landowners
7. Globalization and the collapsing distinction between local and federal citizenship
Part III. Race, Space, Place and Urban Citizenship: 8. A return to urban citizenship?
9. Republican citizenship
10. Postmodern citizenship
11. Differentiated citizenship.

Subject Areas: Urban & municipal planning [RPC], Planning law [LNKW], Constitutional & administrative law [LND], International environmental law [LBBP], Politics & government [JP], Sociology [JHB]

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