Citizenship and Nationhood in France and GermanyHarvard University Press, 1992 - 270 páginas The difference between French and German definitions of citizenship is instructive—and, for millions of immigrants from North Africa, Turkey, and Eastern Europe, decisive. Rogers Brubaker shows how this difference—between the territorial basis of the French citizenry and the German emphasis on blood descent—was shaped and sustained by sharply differing understandings of nationhood, rooted in distinctive French and German paths to nation-statehood. |
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... state constitutes and perpetually reconstitutes itself as an association of citizens , publicly identifies a set of persons as its members , and residually classifies everyone else in the world as a noncitizen , an alien . The ...
... state constitutes and perpetually reconstitutes itself as an association of citizens , publicly identifies a set of persons as its members , and residually classifies everyone else in the world as a noncitizen , an alien . The ...
Página 4
... organization , it was for six centuries divorced from the reality . In France , then ... state - building in France than in Ger- many in turn reflects a deep ... membership or " identity " was primarily ethnocultural in medieval or early ...
... organization , it was for six centuries divorced from the reality . In France , then ... state - building in France than in Ger- many in turn reflects a deep ... membership or " identity " was primarily ethnocultural in medieval or early ...
Página 7
... membership were much dis- puted during the revolutionary epoch , but such disputes turned on a political rather than an ethnocultural axis . So too did the question of the territorial boundaries of the new nation - state . The principle ...
... membership were much dis- puted during the revolutionary epoch , but such disputes turned on a political rather than an ethnocultural axis . So too did the question of the territorial boundaries of the new nation - state . The principle ...
Página 8
... membership , according to which " natural " ethnolinguistic boundaries are prior to and determinative of national and ( ideally ) state boundaries . It is one thing to want to make all citizens of Utopia speak Utopian , and quite ...
... membership , according to which " natural " ethnolinguistic boundaries are prior to and determinative of national and ( ideally ) state boundaries . It is one thing to want to make all citizens of Utopia speak Utopian , and quite ...
Página 16
... membership of the German nation - state thus supported an interest in a restrictive definition of citizenship . An expan- sive citizenship law like that of France , automatically transforming second - generation immigrants into citizens ...
... membership of the German nation - state thus supported an interest in a restrictive definition of citizenship . An expan- sive citizenship law like that of France , automatically transforming second - generation immigrants into citizens ...
Conteúdo
Citizenship as Social Closure | 21 |
The French Revolution and the Invention of National Citizenship | 35 |
State StateSystem and Citizenship in Germany | 50 |
DEFINING THE CITIZENRY THE BOUNDS OF BELONGING | 73 |
Citizenship and Naturalization in France and Germany | 75 |
Migrants into Citizens The Crystallization of Jus Soli in LateNineteenthCentury France | 85 |
The Citizenry as Community of Descent The Nationalization of Citizenship in Wilhelmine Germany | 114 |
Etre Français Cela se Mérite Immigration and the Politics of Citizenship in France in the 1980s | 138 |
Continuities in the German Politics of Citizenship | 165 |
Conclusion | 179 |
Notes | 191 |
Bibliography | 245 |
267 | |
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Termos e frases comuns
administrative Algerian Algerian immigrants Alsace-Lorraine ancien régime Article 23 assimilation assimilationist attribution of citizenship Auslandsdeutsche automatically become French birth born in France century citizenry citizenship law citizenship status civic incorporation closure concern Constitution cultural debate defined definition of citizenship demographic distinctive droit dual citizenship ethnic Germans ethnonational étrangers Europe exclusion formal français France and Germany French citizens French citizenship French citizenship law French nationality French Revolution German Empire Grawert Ibid immi inclusive institution interest internal Jews jus sanguinis jus soli legislative membership migration military service modern nation-state national citizenship national self-understanding nationalist Nationalstaat naturalization policy nineteenth noncitizens percent persons born Polenpolitik Poles Polish politics of citizenship population principle privileged proposal Prussian Prussian east quoted Reich Reichstag Republican residence restrictive Revolution second-generation immigrants social Soviet Union Staat und Staatsangehörigkeit ständisch state-membership state-national territory third-generation immigrants tion tradition understanding of nationhood Volksdeutsche voluntarist Wilhelmine
Passagens mais conhecidas
Página 5 - Not ideas, but material and ideal interests, directly govern men's conduct. Yet very frequently the ‘world images' that have been created by ‘ideas' have, like switchmen, determined the tracks along which action has been pushed by the dynamic of interest.
Página 4 - We cannot therefore decode political language to reach a primal and material expression of interest since it is the discursive structure of political language which conceives and defines interest in the first place.
Referências a este livro
The Volume and Dynamics of International Migration and Transnational Social ... Thomas Faist Prévia não disponível - 2000 |
Rights Across Borders: Immigration and the Decline of Citizenship David Jacobson Prévia não disponível - 1997 |