SOC375H5 Chapter Notes - Chapter 9: Diederik Korteweg, Multiple Citizenship, Unitary Group
Document Summary
Citizenship and immigration: multiculturalism, assimilation, and challenges to the nation-state- Citizenship encompasses legal status, rights, participation, and belonging. Ethnic vs. civic citizenship, multiculturalism, and assimilation. Immigration challenges and reaffirms national identity, sovereignty, and state control that have been linked to citizenship: studied at two levels: citizenship within national borders, and placing borders into question. Four dimensions: legal status, rights, participation, sense of belonging: these four dimensions cut across each other, reinforcing or undermining the boundaries and content of citizenship. If rights are understood broadly and guaranteed regardless of country of birth, immigrants" legal equality and participation might challenge existing understandings of belonging. The promise and limits of marshall"s view of citizenship. Full membership views rights as valuable, but also means to ensure solidarity necessary for functioning of social democratic welfare state. Citizenship rights and legal status promote participation and sense of belonging, facilitate social cohesion and common political projects.