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Cultures, Citizenship and Human Rights

✍ Scribed by Rosemarie Buikema; Antoine Buyse; Antonius C.G.M. Robben


Publisher
Routledge
Year
2020
Tongue
English
Leaves
269
Series
Routledge Advances in Sociology
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


In Cultures, Citizenship and Human Rights the combined analytical efforts of the fields of human rights law, conflict studies, anthropology, history, media studies, gender studies, and critical race and postcolonial studies raise a comprehensive understanding of the discursive and visual mediation of migration and manifestations of belonging and citizenship.

More insight into the convergence, but also the tensions between the cultural and the legal foundations of citizenship, has proven to be vital to the understanding of societies past and present, especially to assess processes of inclusion and exclusion. Citizenship is more than a collection of rights and privileges held by the individual members of a state, but involves cultural and historical interpretations, legal contestation and regulation as well as an active engagement with national, regional and local state and other institutions about the boundaries of those (implicitly gendered and raced) rights and privileges.

Highlighting and assessing the transformations of what citizenship entails today is crucially important to the future of Europe, which both as an idea and as a practical project faces challenges that range from the crisis of legitimacy to the problems posed by mass migration. Many of the issues addressed in this book however also play out in other parts of the world, as several of the chapters reflect.

This book is available for free in PDF format as Open Access from the individual product page atγ€€www.routledge.com. They have been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Half Title
Series
Title
Copyright
Contents
List of figures
List of tables
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I Mediation
1 Persistent looking in the space of appearance #BlackLivesMatter
2 Community media makers and the mediation of difference: claiming citizenship and belongingness
3 β€œOn this path to Europe” – the symbolic role of the β€˜Balkan corridor’ in the European migration debate
4 Recycling the Christian past: the heritagization of Christianity and national identity in the Netherlands
Part II Sovereignty
5 Love and sovereignty: an exploration of the struggle for new beginnings
6 Postsecular pacification: pentecostalism and military urbanism in Rio de Janeiro
7 Cities of refuge: rights, culture and the creation of cosmopolitan cityzenship
8 Deepening and widening of the protection of fundamental rights of European citizens vis-Γ -vis non-state, private actors
Part III Contestation
9 Looking back, looking forward: citizenship, contestation, and a new compact for child and youth mobility?
10 In search of new narratives: the role of cultural norms and actors in addressing human rights contestation
11 Contested cultural citizenship of a virtual transnational community: structural impediments for women to participate in the Republic of Letters (1400–1800)
12 The art of dissent: Ai Weiwei, rebel with a cause
Editors
Index


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