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Definition: citizenship from Merriam-Webster's Collegiate(R) Dictionary

(1611) 1 : the status of being a citizen 2 a : membership in a community (as a college) b : the quality of an individual's response to membership in a community


Citizenship

From Encyclopedia of Social Problems
Citizenship is both a legal status and a social identity. Legally, citizenship refers to an individual’s political status, rights, and obligations in a nation, for example, the right to political representation or participation in the judicial process in that nation. Socially, citizenship refers to an individual’s membership in a political organization or community. Whereas legal citizenship is closely linked to nationalism, the social conception of citizenship focuses on individual or group political ideology. In both, however, notions of morals, good standing, and social responsibility elements of so-called active citizenship are central to what it means to be a citizen. Legal citizenship comprises several types. For example, in the United States, citizenship occurs through birth, naturalization, or, rarely, through an act of Congress and presidential assent. Any person born in a U.S. territory or from U.S. citizen parent(s) automatically becomes an U.S. citizen. In other countries, …
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Full text Article citizenship

From Cambridge Dictionary of Sociology
The notion of citizenship can be traced back to the Greek polis that tied rights to membership of the city , excluding women and slaves. The modern version of citizenship is connected to the twin processes of nation building and industrialization following the American and French Revolutions. …
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Full text Article CITIZENSHIP

From Dictionary of Prisons and Punishment
Citizenship is a term used to describe the relationship between an individual and the state. The concept of citizenship is imprecise and contested. The dictionary definition is ‘a native or inhabitant of a state’, and the term is often used in a narrow sense related to immigration or nationality…
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Full text Article citizenship

From The Penguin Dictionary of Sociology
The concept of citizenship as a status that provides access to rights and powers is associated with MARSHALL (1963). Civic rights comprise freedom of speech and equality before the law. Political rights include the right to vote and to organize politically. Socio-economic rights include economic…
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Full text Article Citizenship

From The SAGE Encyclopedia of Children and Childhood Studies
Citizenship is a contested concept. Citizenship is a form of membership in a political entity or collectivity, which provides status, rights, responsibilities, and opportunities for participation through which an individual's relationship to the collectivity is regulated. Citizenship is therefore a…
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Full text Article CITIZENSHIP

From Dictionary of Race, Ethnicity & Culture
From the Latin civis , citizen, via the ancient Italian form, cittade , the term ‘citizenship’ defines a legal status, i.e. the belonging of an individual to a political unit (usually a state) which awards him or her a particular status and a series of rights and duties. The implications of…
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Full text Article citizenship

From Encyclopedia of American Government and Civics
Citizenship refers to membership in a political community and as such is a core concept in the discipline of political science. The concept of citizenship is applicable to many types of political regimes, though Aristotle's famous distinction between the good man and the good citizen bears keeping…
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Full text Article Citizenship

From The SAGE Encyclopedia of Trans Studies
Trans citizenship concerns the rights and responsibilities that trans people have across a range of different social spheres, including the law, politics, health care, cultural representation, and the wider society. The concept of trans citizenship allows us to think about universal trans rights, …
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INTRODUCTION Citizenship has long been the subject of considerable policy, scholarly as well as everyday engagement. Despite having origins that can be traced back to antiquity, citizenship as we know it today has been transformed and continues to be transformed as a result of broader global…
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Full text Article Citizenship

From Encyclopedia of Race and Racism
The Dred Scott Decision. The June 27, 1857,...
At its most basic level, citizenship is membership—membership in a country or state, along with an associated set of rights, privileges, expectations, and responsibilities that are equal to all other persons who are members of the country or state. Citizenship is based on any number of factors, …
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Full text Article citizenship

From Encyclopedia of Social and Cultural Anthropology
Anthropological work on the theme of citizenship tends to break open the classic version of citizenship as a legal status belonging to citizens of a particular nation-state. Now, ‘citizenship’ almost inevitably has one of a set of adjectives preceding it: biological, pharmaceutical, therapeutic, …
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