Series editor's foreword
Preface and acknowledgements
Introduction
Part one: Models of citizenship
The liberal theory of citizenship
rights and duties
Communitarian theories of citizenship
participation and identity
The radical theories of politics
citizenship and democracy
Part two: The cosmopolitan challenge
Cosmopolitan citizenship
beyond the nation-state
Human rights and citizenship
the emergence of the embodied self
Globalization and the deterritorialization of space
between order and chaos
The transformation of the nation-state
nationalism, the city, migration and multi-culturalism
European integration and postnational citizenship
four kinds of postnationalization
Part three: Rethinking citizenship
The reconfiguration of citizenship
postnational governance in the multi-levelled polity
Conclusion
the idea of civic cosmopolitanism
References
Index.
Gerard Delanty is Professor of Sociology at the University of Liverpool. He was Visiting Professor at York University, Toronto in 1998, and in 2000 Visiting Professor at Doshisha University, Kyoto, Japan, and he has taught at universities in Ireland, Germany and Italy. He is the Chief Editor of the European Journal of Social Theory and author of many articles on social theory, the philosophy of the social sciences and the historical and political sociology of European societies. He has written the following books: Inventing Europe: Idea, Identity, Reality (1995), Social Science: Beyond Constructivism and Realism (1997), Social Theory in a Changing World (1999), Modernity and Postmodernity: Knowledge, Power, the Self (2000). He is also publishing a book on the university and the knowledge society with Open University Press.
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