Citizenship and Nationhood in France and GermanyHarvard University Press, 30 de jun. de 2009 - 284 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. Brubaker explores this difference - between the territorial basis of the French citizenry and the German emphasis on blood descent - and shows how it translates into rights and restrictions for millions of would-be French and German citizens. Why French citizenship is territorially inclusive, and German citizenship ethnically exclusive, becomes clear in Brubaker's historical account of distinctive French and German paths to nation-statehood. Two fundamental legal principles of national citizenship emerge from this analysis, leading Brubaker to broad and original observations on the constitution of the modern state. |
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Página vii
... Revolution and the Invention of National Citizenship ix 1 21 3. State , State - System , and Citizenship in Germany 33556 50 II . DEFINING THE CITIZENRY : THE BOUNDS OF BELONGING 4. Citizenship and Naturalization in France and Germany ...
... Revolution and the Invention of National Citizenship ix 1 21 3. State , State - System , and Citizenship in Germany 33556 50 II . DEFINING THE CITIZENRY : THE BOUNDS OF BELONGING 4. Citizenship and Naturalization in France and Germany ...
Página 1
... Revolutionary and Repub- lican definitions of nationhood and citizenship—unitarist, universalist, and secular—reinforced what ... Revolution through an historicist celebration of cultural particularism. Mid-nineteenth-century French in ...
... Revolutionary and Repub- lican definitions of nationhood and citizenship—unitarist, universalist, and secular—reinforced what ... Revolution through an historicist celebration of cultural particularism. Mid-nineteenth-century French in ...
Página 6
... Revolutionary Crystallization The opposition between French and German understandings of nation- hood , while rooted in political and cultural geography , was fixed deci sively by the French Revolution and its aftermath . The idea of ...
... Revolutionary Crystallization The opposition between French and German understandings of nation- hood , while rooted in political and cultural geography , was fixed deci sively by the French Revolution and its aftermath . The idea of ...
Página 7
... revolutionary epoch, but such disputes turned on a political rather than an ethnocultural axis. So too did the question of the ... Revolution was determined by political considerations rather than by a conception of the nation as an ...
... revolutionary epoch, but such disputes turned on a political rather than an ethnocultural axis. So too did the question of the ... Revolution was determined by political considerations rather than by a conception of the nation as an ...
Página 8
... Revolutionary expansion, itself driven by political nationalism, thus engendered ethnocultural nation- alism; the “crusade for liberty” elicited in response the myth, if not the reality, of a “holy war” of ethnonational resistance ...
... Revolutionary expansion, itself driven by political nationalism, thus engendered ethnocultural nation- alism; the “crusade for liberty” elicited in response the myth, if not the reality, of a “holy war” of ethnonational resistance ...
Conteúdo
1 | |
I THE INSTITUTION OF CITIZENSHIP | 19 |
THE BOUNDS OF BELONGING | 73 |
Conclusion | 179 |
Notes | 191 |
Bibliography | 245 |
Index | 267 |
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Termos e frases comuns
administrative affi Algerian Alsace-Lorraine ancien régime Article 23 assimilation assimilationist attribution of citizenship Auslandsdeutsche automatically become French birth born in France cation century citizenry citizenship status civic incorporation closure codifi cation cultural debate defi nition demographic descent droit dual citizenship ethnic Germans ethnocultural 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 infl institution interest Jews jus sanguinis jus soli legislative membership migration military service modern nation-state national citizenship national self-understanding nationalist Nationalstaat nition of citizenship noncitizens offi percent persons born Polenpolitik Poles Polish politics of citizenship population principle privileged proposal Prussian Prussian east refl ects Reich Reichstag Republican residence restrictive Revolution second-generation immigrants signifi cant social Soviet Union Staat und Staatsangehörigkeit state-membership state-national territory third-generation immigrants tion tradition understanding of nationhood Volksdeutsche voluntarist