ABSTRACT

Does vital citizenship require moral consensus? Or is it the ability to organize their differences that allows people to live together as citizens in a republic? Whereas liberal, republican, and communitarian theories of citizenship analyzed the conditions of citizenship, the central message of this book is that the practical exercise of citizenship, under conditions that are far from ideal, is the main source of its vitality. Instead of arguing for more participation, it focuses on the citizenship of those who, for whatever reason, are already active in the public sphere. Herman van Gunsteren develops a theory of citizenship well suited to the era of political reform that was inaugurated by the revolutions of 1989.

part One|30 pages

Why Citizenship?

chapter One|8 pages

Citizenship on the Political Agenda

chapter Two|20 pages

Theories of Citizenship, Old and New

part Two|47 pages

What Citizens Do

chapter Three|20 pages

Plurality in The Unknown Society

chapter Four|6 pages

Against Consensus

chapter Five|8 pages

Deep Groups Under a Multicultural Surface

chapter Six|11 pages

Citizens in Public Office

part Three|70 pages

How Citizens Are Formed

chapter Seven|10 pages

Education

chapter Eight|11 pages

Admission and Exclusion

chapter Nine|8 pages

Work and Third Age Citizens

chapter Ten|22 pages

Moral Unity or a Steady Diet of Conflicts?

chapter Eleven|16 pages

Political Institutions and the Idea of Citizenship

chapter |5 pages

The Outlook for Citizenship