ABSTRACT

Making Citizenship Work seeks to address questions of how a community reaches a place where it can actually make citizenship work.  A second question addressed is "What does citizenship represent to different communities?"

Across thirteen chapters a collection of experts traverse multiple disciplines in analyzing citizenship from different points of access. Each chapter revolves around the premise that empowerment of communities, and individuals within the community, comes in different forms and is governed by multiple needs and visions. Authors utilize case studies to demonstrate the different roles that communities from a broad sector of our society adopt to accomplish constructing democratic processes that reflect their goals, needs, and cultures. Concurrently authors address the structural obstacles to the empowerment of communities, arguing that the democratic process does not and cannot accommodate the diverse communities of society within a single universalistic model of citizenship. They conclude that fundamentally citizenship is not simply a legal right, an obligation, a state of rights, but a practice, an action on the behalf of community.

Making Citizenship Work challenges conventional thinking about politics while also encouraging readers to go beyond the box that deters us from visualizing a human society. It is an ideal book for undergraduate and graduate courses in political science, sociology, history, social work and Ethnic Studies.

part 1|76 pages

History as an Ongoing Human Struggle

chapter 3|10 pages

Building Critical Radical Communities

Liberation Pedagogies and the Origins of Black Studies

chapter 4|20 pages

Community as the Basis of Resistance

A Historical Analysis

part 2|55 pages

Culture as the Basis of Human Dignity

chapter 5|17 pages

How Prison Survivors Shift What Civic Participation Means

Incarceration and Activism in the Pandemic

chapter 6|16 pages

The Struggle for Mexican American Studies in Texas K-12 Public Schools

A Movement for Epistemic Justice through Creation/Resistance

chapter 7|20 pages

Remembering and Reconciling

Native American Women, Community, and Citizenship

part 3|74 pages

Community, Agency, Citizenship

part 4|62 pages

The Historical Roots of Community Agency

chapter 12|27 pages

Salus Populi - From the Pacific to the Americas

Community Health, Resistance, and Solidarity

chapter 13|31 pages

Carbon copies

Colonial Recognition, Climate Crisis, and Indigenous Belonging

chapter |2 pages

Conclusion