Ambiguous Citizenship in an Age of Global Migration
Ambiguous Citizenship in an Age of Global Migration
Lecturer in International Politics
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Abstract
Citizenship is widely understood in binary statist terms: inclusion/exclusion, past/present, particularism/universalism, with the emphasis on how globalisation brings such binaries into sharp focus and exacerbates them. This book highlights the limitations of this position and of current debate, and explores the possibility that citizenship is being reconfigured in contemporary political life beyond binary state-oriented categories. Aoileann Ní Mhurchú uses critical resources found in poststructural, psychoanalytic and postcolonial thought to think in new ways about citizenship-subjectivity in a globalized world, drawing on a range of thinkers including Julia Kristeva, Homi Bhabha and Michel Foucault. Using the 2004 Irish Citizenship Referendum as a lens and focusing on experiences of intergenerational migrants (the children born to migrants), she highlights the necessity of a more sophisticated understanding of citizenship which takes into account how some people get caught between state-sovereign categories, and provides a robust theoretical discussion about how citizenship increasingly involves overlapping, ambiguous traces of us and them, inclusion and exclusion, particularism and universalism which confound easy categorisation. In doing so it raises questions about how citizenship is understood in time and space. In this way Ambiguous Citizenship in an Age of Global Migration contributes to the growing and dynamic interdisciplinary field of critical citizenship studies (CCS), which explores new forms of political identity and belonging in a globalising world.
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Front Matter
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Introduction
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1
Exploring the Citizenship Debate: The Sovereign Citizen-Subject
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2
A Lens: The 2004 Irish Citizenship Referendum
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3
Trapped in the Citizenship Debate: Sovereign Time and Space
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4
Interrogating Sovereign Politics: An Alternative Citizen-Subject
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5
Challenging the Citizenship Debate: Beyond Sovereign Time and Space
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6
Traces Rather than Spaces of Citizenship: Retheorising the Politics of Citizenship
- Conclusion
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End Matter
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