Citizenship Beyond the State

Front Cover
SAGE, May 25, 2004 - Education - 192 pages
Is 'citizenship' still a useful concept? Can citizens - and democracy - exist independently of the state?

This text provides an accessible guide to the theories and debates that surround the key political concepts of state, citizenship, and democracy today.

John Hoffman reviews the modern development of these concepts from the classic texts of Marx and Weber to the post-war critiques of the feminist, multicultural and critical theorists and considers the on-going barriers to a full realisation of a democratic citizenship.

By carefully considering what the state is and what it does, Hoffman shows that it is possible to respond to these critiques and challenges and 'reclaim' citizenship and democracy as inclusive and emancipatory, rather than divisive and controlling.

In advancing this alternative view of a 'stateless' citizenship, Hoffman opens up new possibilities for conceiving power and society in contemporary politics today. It will be essential reading for all students of politics and sociology for whom the questions of state, nationality, power and identity remain of central importance.

 

Contents

Can the State be Defined?
17
Democracy
32
State and Nationalism
49
Gender and Violence
64
Capitalism Class and Social Rights
79
Participation
98
Globalization
114
The Problem of Agency and Realization
154
Conclusion
173
49
177
52
184
Glossary
185
66
189
53
190
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases