ABSTRACT

The dramatic changes that have occurred in modern nation-states have engendered a renewed and increasing interest in issues of citizenship and rights. The original essays in this collection describe the formation and transformation of citizenship and rights, considering issues such as legal culture, sovereignty, jurisdiction, diversity, welfare, and related state norms, structures, practices, and resources. Employing a variety of theoretical frameworks and sociological orientations, the contributors explore the creation of public boundaries, along with changes in the rules defining citizenship roles, identities, and rights.

part I|37 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|35 pages

Constituting Citizens

Rights and Rules

part II|111 pages

The World Polity

chapter 3|22 pages

Dynamics of Citizenship Development and the Political Incorporation of Women

A Global Institutionalization Research Agenda

chapter 4|25 pages

Women's Alternative Path to Citizenship

An Examination of Global Employment Policy

chapter 5|18 pages

Citizenship in the Curriculum

The Globalization of Civics Education in Anglophone Africa, 1955–1995

part III|218 pages

National Policy

chapter 7|54 pages

Rights, Relationality, and Membership

Rethinking the Making and Meaning of Citizenship *

chapter 8|32 pages

The Classificatory Logics of State Welfare Systems

Towards a Formal Analysis

chapter 9|26 pages

Gendering the Analysis of Welfare States

(With Examples from Australia and the United States)

chapter 12|27 pages

Citizenship and Rights

Worker Protection in Germany and the United States

chapter 13|28 pages

Contested Citizenship

The Dynamics of Racial Identity and Social Movements *

part IV|25 pages

Conclusion

chapter 14|23 pages

Rights and Rules

Constituting World Citizens