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1

Fan, Irina B. "Liberal Discourse of Citizenship". Discourse-P 27, n.º 2 (1 de dezembro de 2017): 170–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.17506/dipi.2017.27.2.170173.

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Khan, Kamran, e Adrian Blackledge. "‘They look into our lips’". Language & Citizenship 14, n.º 3 (17 de agosto de 2015): 382–405. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/jlp.14.3.04kha.

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The British citizenship ceremony marks the legal endpoint of the naturalisation process. While the citizenship ceremony may be a celebration, it can also be a final examination. Using an ethnographically-informed case study, this article follows one candidate, ‘W’, through the naturalisation process in the UK. W is a migrant Yemeni at the end of the naturalisation process. Bakhtin’s notion of “ideological becoming” offers an analytic orientation into how competing discourses may operate. This article focuses on the role of what Bakhtin describes as “authoritative discourse” in the citizenship ceremony, in particular the Oath/Affirmation of Allegiance which citizenship candidates are required to recite. Success in the ceremony is dependent on how individuals negotiate authoritative discourse. This study follows W and highlights the complexities and negotiations of authoritative discourse in a citizenship ceremony.
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Herzog, Ben. "Presenting Ethnicity: Israeli Citizenship Discourse". Contemporary Review of the Middle East 6, n.º 3-4 (setembro de 2019): 383–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2347798919872840.

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In 1950, Israel enacted the Law of Return and 2 years afterwards passed its Citizenship Law. These measures reflected the Zionist goal of encouraging Jewish immigration to Israel/Palestine, so citizenship was mostly limited to Jews. In other words, an ascriptive/ethnic classification was at the foundation of Israeli citizenship. This article explores the construction of the citizenship laws in relation to various forms of categorization—biological descent, cultural belonging, racial classifications, and voluntary affiliation. It asks how the Israeli citizenship policy was presented and which mechanisms were employed in order to justify the incorporation of all Jews, including those from Arab countries, while attempting to exclude non-Jews. After analyzing official state policies and parliamentary debates in Israel regarding the citizenship laws, I present the mechanisms employed to present the ethnic immigration policy. Those mechanisms include emphasizing the positive and democratic sides of allowing Jewish immigration; repeatedly avoiding the usage of racial terminology; highlighting the willingness to incorporate non-Jewish residents; and employing security justifications when prohibiting non-Jewish immigration. Being the Jewish State, Israel wanted to favor Jews in its immigration and naturalization policies. However, being also committed to democratic values and principles, it desired to disassociate itself from racial attitudes.
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Asen, Robert. "A discourse theory of citizenship". Quarterly Journal of Speech 90, n.º 2 (maio de 2004): 189–211. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0033563042000227436.

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Karlberg, Michael. "Discourse, Identity, and Global Citizenship". Peace Review 20, n.º 3 (setembro de 2008): 310–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10402650802330139.

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Moos, Lejf, Elisabet Nihlfors e Jan Merok Paulsen. "Leading and Organising Education for Citizenship of the World". Nordic Journal of Comparative and International Education (NJCIE) 2, n.º 2-3 (7 de novembro de 2018): 1–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.7577/njcie.2891.

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This special issue discusses governance, leadership and education in the light of Nordic ideas about general education and citizenship of the world. Particular focus is placed on the battle between two very different discourses in contemporary educational policy and practice: an outcomes/standard-based discourse, and a general education-based discourse of citizenship of the world.Our point of departure is that we need to analyse the close relations between the core and purpose of schooling (the democratic Bildung of students) and the leadership of schools and relations to the outer world. On the one hand, society produces a discourse based on outcomes, with a focus on the marketplace, governance, bureaucracies, account-ability and technocratic homogenisation. On the other hand, society focuses on culture in the arts, language, history, relations and communication, producing a discourse based on democratic Bildung and citizenship of the world.
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Xu, Peng. "Positioning Children Citizens: Exploring Discourses in Early Childhood Curricula in China and Aotearoa New Zealand". New Zealand Annual Review of Education 24 (27 de fevereiro de 2020): 58. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/nzaroe.v24i0.6324.

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Positioning young children as citizens, now rather than as citizens in waiting, is an emerging discourse in early childhood education internationally. Differing discourses related to young children and early childhood reveal various ideas of children as citizens, and what their citizenship status, practice and education can be. This paper analyses the national early childhood education (ECE) curricula of China and Aotearoa New Zealand for the purpose of understanding how children are constructed as citizens within such policy discourses. Discourse analysis is employed in this study as a methodological approach for understanding the subjectivities of young children and exploring the meanings of young children’s citizenship in both countries. Based on Foucault’s theory of governmentality, this paper ultimately argues that young children’s citizenship in contemporary ECE curricula in China and New Zealand is a largely neoliberal construction. However, emerging positionings shape differing possibilities for citizenship education for young children in each of these countries.
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Fellendorf, Ansgar. "Shifting surface". Novos Olhares 9, n.º 1 (9 de julho de 2020): 98–113. http://dx.doi.org/10.11606/issn.2238-7714.no.2020.171993.

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This research explores how satellite images of Arctic sea ice contribute to climate change discourse. Different discourses require distinct responses. Policy measures are contingent upon representation, be it i.e. a threat or opportunity. The representations discussed are by the NSIDC and NASA, which hold a visual hegemony. First, the introduction discusses visual studies in policy research and identifies a simplified dichotomy of a threat discourse and environmental citizenship. Moreover, the methodology of visual discourse analysis based on poststructuralism is described. The delineated images portray a vertical, planar view allowing for spatial reference. Arctic sea ice is a visible climate change effect and the absence of boundaries, intervisuality with the Earthrise icon and focus on environmental effects support a discourse of citizenship.
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Smith, Brian. "Citizenship without states: rehabilitating citizenship discourse among the anarchist left". Citizenship Studies 23, n.º 5 (19 de maio de 2019): 424–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13621025.2019.1620688.

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Moos, Lejf. "Educating and Leading for World Citizenship". Nordic Journal of Comparative and International Education (NJCIE) 2, n.º 2-3 (7 de novembro de 2018): 7–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.7577/njcie.2758.

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Two perspectives on local and global societies, and therefore also on education, are explored and discussed in this paper. On one hand, society as a civilisation is producing an outcome-based discourse with a focus on marketplaces, governance, bureaucracies and accountability. On the other hand, society focuses on cul-ture through arts, language, history, relations and communication, producing a democratic Bildung dis-course. At a global level, I see those discourses shaping discourses of world citizenship and of global mar-ketplace logics with technocratic homogenisation. Those trends and tendencies are found through social analytic strategies in these categories: context of discourses, visions, themes, processes, and leadership.
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Esparza, Louis Edgar. "Citizenship: Discourse, Theory, and Transnational Prospects". Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews 38, n.º 1 (janeiro de 2009): 60–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/009430610903800135.

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Shukla, Natasha. "Power, discourse, and learning global citizenship". Education, Citizenship and Social Justice 4, n.º 2 (25 de junho de 2009): 133–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1746197909103933.

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최원. "Democratic Citizenship?: Balibar's Discourse on Democracy". Korean Cultural Studies ll, n.º 70 (fevereiro de 2016): 71–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.17948/kcs.2016..70.71.

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Chiluwa, Innocent. "Citizenship, participation, and CMD". Pragmatics and Society 3, n.º 1 (13 de fevereiro de 2012): 61–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/ps.3.1.03chi.

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NaijaPals and Nolitics, respectively a hosting site and a discussion forum by and for Nigerians, provide an opportunity for the citizens’ social and political participation. As a hosting website with social networking and blogging activities, NaijaPals maintains an online community, with Nolitics as a discussion forum solely dedicated to social and political debate. Members exchange information and engage in critical analysis of Nigeria’s political system. A total of 104 ‘posts’ are analyzed in the framework of Computer-Mediated Discourse Analysis (CMDA) and Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA). The analysis highlights the roles of political discourse in Nolitics, mainly as social critique, with the aim of shaping political leadership and involving the citizens in political governance. Discourse in this context is viewed as discursive practice, in the form of political propaganda; anti-corruption campaigns; socio-political mobilization; and recommendations for growth — all of these mediated in written texts. The analyses also show that metaphors, directive speech acts and questioning are used as discursive strategies.
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Wang, Chenyu, e Diane M. Hoffman. "Are WE the world? A critical reflection on selfhood and global citizenship education". education policy analysis archives 24 (16 de maio de 2016): 56. http://dx.doi.org/10.14507/epaa.24.2152.

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Although much debate exists on the conceptualization, nature, and goals of global citizenship education, there has been widespread support for incorporating ideals of global citizenship into the practices, texts, and curricula of U.S. schools and universities. This article offers an interpretive discourse-based critique of ideas of selfhood underlying global citizenship education. Based on analyses of two U.S. high school curricula and materials available on websites devoted to global citizenship, we develop a critique of universalizing constructs of selfhood that underlie global citizenship discourse. These assumptions obscure reflection on dynamics of social class privilege that shape global citizenship activism and situate global citizenship education as a potentially counter-productive neoliberal discourse. The article concludes with recommendations for practitioners interested in developing a more self-reflective and critical global citizenship education.
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Crawford, Keith. "New Labour, New Policies: Constructing a Discourse of Citizenship". Citizenship, Social and Economics Education 3, n.º 2 (junho de 1998): 101–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.2304/csee.1998.3.2.101.

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The purpose of this paper is examine the development of citizenship education as a curriculum priority within the UK. Employing Habermas' theory of legitimation crisis, the paper places the contemporary enthusiasm for citizenship education within a socioeconomic, cultural and political context. The paper argues that current preoccupations with citizenship education contained in Education for Citizenship and the Teaching of Democracy in Schools (Dfee, 1999), stem from the impact of Neo-Liberal concerns with individualism, economic and technological globalisation and the potential fragmentation of contemporary society. The paper explores the principles of education for citizenship and the teaching of democracy in schools and suggests that, as part of New Labour's developing conception of British society, citizenship education asks some fundamental questions of that society.
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Chaudhary, Zahid R. "Sacrificing Citizenship". Social Text 37, n.º 3 (1 de setembro de 2019): 1–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/01642472-7585026.

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This article analyzes the discourse concerning the assimilation of Muslim minorities in the United States and suggests that calls for assimilation are solicitations for a form of self-renunciation and sacrifice. Yet such solicitations occur against the economic and political background of neoliberalism, in which all citizens are asked to make sacrifices for the sake of economic health. How does one read, then, the discourse of Muslim assimilation in light of the psychological, political, and economic realities of neoliberalism? The article explores the transformation of the so-called Jewish question into the contemporary concern with the “Muslim problem.” Drawing on Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer’s reflections on the affinities between capitalism and fascism (especially their reading of Odysseus), as well as Sigmund Freud’s reflections on narcissism and group psychology, the article analyzes the figure of the sacrificial victim in the context of neoliberalism’s authoritarian tendencies and argues that sacrificial figuration allows us to think past the polarizations (West/rest; Trump supporters/Muslims) of our contemporary historical moment.
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Jeonghee Seo. "Two Face of Citizenship Discourse - Reinterpretation of Social Citizenship of Marshall -". Korean Journal of Social Welfare Studies ll, n.º 39 (dezembro de 2008): 147–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.16999/kasws.2008..39.147.

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19

MacDonald, Malcolm N., Duncan Hunter e John P. O'Regan. "Citizenship, community, and counter-terrorism". Journal of Language and Politics 12, n.º 3 (27 de setembro de 2013): 445–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/jlp.12.3.07mac.

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This paper analyses a corpus of UK policy documents which sets out national security policy as an exemplar of the contemporary discourse of counter-terrorism in Europe, the USA and worldwide. A corpus of 148 documents (c. 2.8 million words) was assembled to reflect the security discourse produced by the UK government before and after the 7/7 attacks on the London Transport system. To enable a chronological comparison, the two sub-corpora were defined: one relating to a discourse of citizenship and community cohesion (2001–2006); and one relating to the ‘Preventing Violent Extremism’ discourse (2007–2011). Wordsmith Tools (Scott 2008) was used to investigate keywords and patterns of collocation. The results present themes emerging from a comparative analysis of the 100 strongest keywords in each sub-corpus; as well as a qualitative analysis of related patterns of the collocation, focusing in particular on features of connotation and semantic prosody.
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Cisneros, Natalie. "“Alien” Sexuality: Race, Maternity, and Citizenship". Hypatia 28, n.º 2 (2013): 290–306. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/hypa.12023.

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In this paper, I provide an analysis of the emergence of “problematic of alien sexuality.” I first locate discourses about “alien sexuality,” and the so‐called anchor baby in particular, within other national discourses surrounding maternity, the fetus, and citizenship. I analyze the ways that national political discourses surrounding “anchor babies” and “alien maternity” construct the “problematic of alien sexuality,” thus constituting the “alien” subject as always‐already perverse. I suggest that this production of a sexually deviant and threatening “alien” subject functions in the normative dichotomy that places the sexually pure citizen on the one hand, and the perverse anticitizen on the other, in what I call “backwards uncitizening.” My analysis of this process shows that the perverse “alien” subject, as constituted in significant part by nonjuridical normalizing mechanisms of biopower, resists the juridical discourse that is supposed to determine it.
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Rodríguez-Ruiz, Blanca. "Gender in Constitutional Discourses on Abortion". Social & Legal Studies 25, n.º 6 (dezembro de 2016): 699–715. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0964663916668251.

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In as far as the regulation of abortion deals with issues like how and to what extent can women’s capacity to gestate and give birth be controlled, and by whom, any discourse on abortion necessarily reflects a construction of women’s citizenship, hence of gender. The question is, which is the ruling construction? Behind non-legal discourses that focus on human life and public power’s duty to protect it, there lies the modern construction of gender that articulates women’s passive citizenship within the state. This is also true of confrontational discourses that construct women and the foetus as potential adversaries. Both discourses are traditional in continental Europe. Yet, they are being superseded by an understanding of abortion from the perspective of women’s active citizenship. Spanish Organic Act 2/2010 stands as part of this trend. Not surprisingly, governmental attempts to reinstate women’s passive citizenship in this matter have met stark resistance.
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Lee, Mary. "Critical metaphor analysis of citizenship education discourse". Public Relations Inquiry 4, n.º 1 (janeiro de 2015): 99–123. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2046147x14559934.

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Rem, Dana, e Des Gasper. "Citizens and Citizenship". International Journal of Social Quality 8, n.º 1 (1 de junho de 2018): 21–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/ijsq.2018.080103.

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The past generation has seen a switch to restrictive policies and language in the governance of migrants living in the Netherlands. Beginning in 2010, a new government with right-wing populist backing went further, declaring the centrality of proposed characteristic historic Dutch values. In this article, we investigate a key policy document to characterize and understand this policy change. Discourse analysis as an exploration of language choices, including use of ideas from rhetoric, helps us apply and test ideas from governmentality studies of migration and from discourse studies as social theorizing. We trace the chosen problem formulation; the delineation, naming, and predication of population categories; the understanding of citizenship, community, and integration; and the overall rhetoric, including chosen metaphors and nuancing of emphases, that links the elements into a meaning-rich world picture. A “neoliberal communitarian” conception of citizenship has emerged that could unfortunately subject many immigrants to marginalization and exclusion.
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Koyama, Jill. "Competing and Contested Discourses of Citizenship and Civic Praxis". education policy analysis archives 25 (27 de março de 2017): 28. http://dx.doi.org/10.14507/epaa.25.2730.

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In this paper, I utilize complementary features of critical discourse analysis (CDA) and Actor-Network Theory (ANT) to trace and investigate issues of power, materiality, and reproduction embedded within notions of citizenship and civic engagement. I interrogate the often narrow and conservative political and public discourses in Arizona, as well as the xenophobic-driven civics education policy. To these, I juxtapose the enactment of citizenship by youth who use, produce, and share language materials and counter authoritative citizenship and civic discourses, especially, but not exclusively, in online contexts. I explore the questions: In what ways are discourses of civic engagement and citizenship assembled, interpreted, understood, enacted, and contested in Arizona? What are the relationships between the civics education policy, discursive enactments of citizenship, and the youth of Mexican descent’s online civic practices? I draw on a mixture of textual (language materials) and discursive (events, acts, and practices) data collected in Arizona to argue that youth are doing critical, yet unrecognized and undervalued, forms of civic engagement online, which could be incorporated in the formal civics education curriculum.
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Andreouli, Eleni, e Parisa Dashtipour. "British Citizenship and the ‘Other’: An Analysis of the Earned Citizenship Discourse". Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology 24, n.º 2 (2 de julho de 2013): 100–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/casp.2154.

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Pugh, Jeffrey D. "Universal Citizenship Through the Discourse and Policy of Rafael Correa". Latin American Politics and Society 59, n.º 3 (2017): 98–121. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/laps.12028.

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AbstractThis article investigates political opportunities and constraints associated with incorporating the concept of universal citizenship into migration debates. Analyzing the speeches of Ecuador's president Rafael Correa over eight years, the article argues that Correa strategically crafted a narrative of universal citizenship to undergird politically beneficial policies. Political constraints from constituents and rivals, and the populist nature of his governing style, hollowed out progressive migration policy innovations to the point that universal citizenship became a rhetorical device more than a substantive policy agenda. Through this empirical case, the article develops a more nuanced critical understanding of universal citizenship discourses as sites for negotiating the relationship between states and migrants.
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Pugh, Jeffrey D. "Universal Citizenship Through the Discourse and Policy of Rafael Correa". Latin American Politics and Society 59, n.º 03 (2017): 98–121. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1531426x00010293.

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AbstractThis article investigates political opportunities and constraints associated with incorporating the concept of universal citizenship into migration debates. Analyzing the speeches of Ecuador's president Rafael Correa over eight years, the article argues that Correa strategically crafted a narrative of universal citizenship to undergird politically beneficial policies. Political constraints from constituents and rivals, and the populist nature of his governing style, hollowed out progressive migration policy innovations to the point that universal citizenship became a rhetorical device more than a substantive policy agenda. Through this empirical case, the article develops a more nuanced critical understanding of universal citizenship discourses as sites for negotiating the relationship between states and migrants.
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Pinto-Coelho, Zara, Anabela Carvalho e Eunice Castro Seixas. "News discourse and readers’ comments: Expanding the range of citizenship positions?" Journalism 20, n.º 6 (15 de maio de 2017): 733–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884917707595.

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Little attention has been paid to the relation between citizens’ representation in news media and citizen participation in readers’ comments, and to the roles both discourses may play in fostering public engagement in official consultation processes. This article offers a discursive analysis of these questions by focusing on how commenters, through their uses of language in connection with news texts, address the political ordering of news discourse and their positioning therein. Using Critical Discourse Analysis and other interaction-oriented forms of discourse analysis, we examine, first, the topics and the framing of voices in news coverage and, second, the interactional order, stance markers and style features of readers’ comments. Based on data regarding a policy plan on hydroelectric power in Portugal that was submitted to public consultation, we show that citizen positionings emerging from the interaction between news texts and comments change the balance of power within the discussion, but their participatory potential is restrained by traditional citizenship regimes.
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Auvachez, Élise. "Penser la citoyenneté européenne. Du Livre blanc sur la gouvernance au projet de Traité constitutionnel". Canadian Journal of Political Science 40, n.º 2 (junho de 2007): 343–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008423907070473.

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Résumé. Dans les discours politiques comme dans la littérature universitaire sur la construction européenne, la dernière décennie du 20ème siècle a été celle de la citoyenneté. Toutefois, la prolifération des théories autour de la citoyenneté européenne s'est brusquement arrêtée en 2001. Ce silence chez les théoriciens européanistes doit-il laisser conclure à une absence de développements en matière de citoyenneté européenne ces dernières années? Dans cet article, nous démontrons que la citoyenneté européenne doit être examinée à la lumière des développements politiques dont l'Union a fait l'objet ces dernières années. La comparaison du Livre Blanc sur la gouvernance européenne (2001) et du projet de Traité constitutionnel (2004) montre une certaine tension dans le discours institutionnel contemporain sur la citoyenneté européenne. L'article propose une nouvelle grille d'analyse pour appréhender cette tension et penser la citoyenneté européenne aujourd'hui; ce nouveau prisme est fondé sur la distinction entre “ citoyenneté de gouvernement ” et “ citoyenneté de gouvernance ”.Abstract. In political discourse as well as scholarly research on the European Union, the last decade of the 20th century was the decade of citizenship. But, despite numerous unresolved questions, there has been a virtual silence on the matter since 2001. Does this mean that there have been no major developments in European citizenship over the past few years? The answer is clearly negative. Via a comparison of the White Paper on European Governance (2001) and the draft Constitution (2004), this article documents a certain tension in the institutional discourse about European citizenship. It proposes a new theoretical model to grasp this tension and to understand European citizenship as it is conceived nowadays. This analytic prism is based on the distinction between “government citizenship” and “governance citizenship.”
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Sriskandarajah, Anuppiriya. "Demonstrating Identities: Multiculturalism, Citizenship, and Tamil Canadian Identities". Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies 17, n.º 2 (junho de 2014): 172–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/diaspora.17.2.172.

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Looking at political demonstrations that occurred throughout 2008 and 2009 in Toronto, this article explores popular understandings of diasporic identities within a Canadian multiculturalism framework. It also examines second-generation Sri Lankan Tamils’ (SLT) (re)negotiations of these representations in forming and informing their identities. Drawing on Kathleen Hall’s (2002) framework, identities are understood as constituted through processes of power, discourse, and representation. Through a critical discourse analysis of newspaper editorials and narrative explorations of second-generation Canadian Tamils, this article investigates how diasporic identities are incorporated into the wider Canadian polity. Fifteen semi-structured interviews were conducted with second-generation Tamil Canadians (ages nineteen to twenty-nine). I argue that popular constructions of diasporic identities and Canadian national identity as understood within a multiculturalism framework are not entirely in concurrence with Tamil diasporic minorities’ own identity narratives. The resultant “othering” causes feelings of marginalization and undermines notions of social citizenship. Concurrently, resistive practices by the second generation embodied by the political démonstrations of 2008-2009 contest “Canadian” identity as promoted in hegemonic representations by dominant elements of society, including the state. Divergences that emerge between the resistive discourses of second-generation Tamils and “mainstream” integrationist discourses demonstrate the need for a more sophisticated conceptualization of how Canadian multiculturalism and citizenship might incorporate the transnational political and cultural practices of its citizens.
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Hojaqizi, Guliatir. "Citizenship and Ethnicity: Old Propiska and New Citizenship in Post-Soviet Uzbekistan". Inner Asia 10, n.º 2 (2008): 305–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/000000008793066740.

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AbstractThis paper looks at two modes of 'belonging' in Uzbekistan: the first as a full citizen and the second as an 'illegal' resident of the place, these being two different ways of perceiving oneself as an Uzbek citizen. It is of crucial importance to consider the direct effect of existing internal registration regulations (propiska) on the self-perception of being a citizen and an Uzbek. I argue that this local policy, together with the failure of citizenship, has led to other kinds of memberships within non state institutions. The overarching Uzbek national identity has become a formal cover and an instrument for political discourse only at a higher level. At the lower level, as local discourses indicate, 'ethnic' or regional net-works and identities have been strengthened and regained their importance in the everyday lives of people in Uzbekistan. I will make use of contemporary approaches to the studies of citizenship that focus on the experiences of citizens and social construction of citizenship from below. The data used in the article was collected as part of fieldwork of thirteen months conducted in Uzbekistan.
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Gray, Breda. "Mobility, Connectivity and Non-Resident Citizenship: Migrant Social Media Campaigns in the Irish Marriage Equality Referendum". Sociology 53, n.º 4 (2 de novembro de 2018): 634–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0038038518807314.

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The proliferation of migrant social media campaigns calling for a ‘Yes’ vote in the Irish Marriage Equality referendum (May 2015) raises new questions about the conventions of political participation and non-resident citizenship rights. Via a discourse analysis of these campaigns, this article shows how the algorithmic agency of social media combines with the political agency and affective identifications of campaigners to shape the terms of non-resident citizen claims for enfranchisement and sexual citizenship rights. The article argues that despite their novel political tactics, the central campaign discourses of (im)mobility (leaving/staying-put), connectivity (active engagement) and ongoing stake in an inclusive homeland are underpinned by conventional democratic criteria for enfranchisement. The article addresses how these discourses intersect with state and business regimes of mobility and connectivity to produce a particular ordering of citizenship. It also points to those emergent practices and norms of political participation generally, and of non-resident citizenship in particular, that are foregrounded by these campaigns.
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Humpage, Louise. "The Moral Repertoires Behind Social Citizenship". Comparative Sociology 14, n.º 3 (11 de agosto de 2015): 328–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15691330-12341348.

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Dean (2004)’s taxonomy of moral repertoires explains contradictory and complex responses to questions about social citizenship in Britain. But are the moral repertoires identified in Britain relevant to other English-speaking ‘liberal’ welfare states? Analysis of interview and focus group data finds the taxonomy is useful for exploring ambivalent attitudes towards social citizenship in New Zealand, where popular discourse regarding responsibility and conditionality is more flexible and varied than that promoted by political elites. Responses do not always fall neatly within Dean’s (2004) taxonomy and context does matter in some cases, but the New Zealand findings largely support his view that popular discourse’s complexity and contradictions offer a space for galvanising social citizenship.
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Dupuis, Sherry L., Pia Kontos, Gail Mitchell, Christine Jonas-Simpson e Julia Gray. "Re-claiming citizenship through the arts". Dementia 15, n.º 3 (maio de 2016): 358–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1471301216637206.

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Healthcare literature, public discourse, and policy documents continue to represent persons with dementia as “doomed” and “socially dead.” This tragedy meta-narrative produces and reproduces misunderstandings about dementia and causes stigma, oppression, and discrimination for persons living with dementia. With few opportunities to challenge the dominant discourse, persons with dementia continue to be denied their citizenship rights. Drawing on the concept of narrative citizenship, we describe a community-based, critical arts-based project where persons with dementia, family members, visual and performance artists, and researchers came together to interrogate the tragedy discourse and construct an alternative narrative of dementia using the arts. Our research demonstrates the power of the arts to create transformative spaces in which to challenge dominant assumptions, foster critical reflection, and envision new possibilities for mutual support, caring, and relating. This alternative narrative supports the reclamation of citizenship for persons living with dementia and fosters the relational citizenship of all.
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Schinkel, Willem. "The Moralisation of Citizenship in Dutch Integration Discourse". Amsterdam Law Forum 1, n.º 1 (24 de setembro de 2008): 15. http://dx.doi.org/10.37974/alf.41.

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Meyer, John C. "Organizational discourse and citizenship: A special issue introduction". Southern Communication Journal 69, n.º 3 (setembro de 2004): 183–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10417940409373291.

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Gleiss, Marielle Stigum. "Discourse, political space and the politics of citizenship". Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift - Norwegian Journal of Geography 71, n.º 4 (8 de agosto de 2017): 233–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00291951.2017.1369455.

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Kim, Nam-Kook. "Revisiting New Right citizenship discourse in Thatcher’s Britain". Ethnicities 10, n.º 2 (27 de maio de 2010): 208–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1468796810361819.

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Schowalter, Dana. "SilencingThe Shriver Report: Postfeminist Citizenship and News Discourse". Communication Review 15, n.º 3 (julho de 2012): 218–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10714421.2012.702001.

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Alviar-Martin, Theresa, e Mark Baildon. "Context and curriculum in two global cities: A study of discourses of citizenship in Hong Kong and Singapore". education policy analysis archives 24 (16 de maio de 2016): 58. http://dx.doi.org/10.14507/epaa.24.2140.

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This qualitative, comparative case study examined global civic education (GCE) in the Asian global cities of Hong Kong and Singapore. Guided by theories that position curriculum at the intersection of discourse, context, and personal meaning-making, we sought to describe the ways in which intentions for GCE reflect broader societal discourses of citizenship and how curricula allow students to tackle tensions surrounding national and global citizenship. We found that Singapore and Hong Kong have adopted depoliticized forms of citizenship as a means of inoculation against global ills. These types of citizenship are more nationalistic than global in nature; moral rather than political; and focused mainly on utilitarian goals to produce adaptable workers able to support national economic projects in the global economy. Although critical, transnational, and other emergent civic perspectives are apparent in both cities, the data yielded little evidence of curricular opportunities for students to become exposed to alternative discourses and reconcile discursive contradictions. The findings inform current literature by illuminating the nexus of local and global discursive practices, implicating the ability of curricula to accommodate both novel and established civic identities, and forwarding suggestions to bridge disconnections between theoretical and local curricular definitions of global citizenship.
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Vodovnik, Ziga. "Rethinking Democracy: A Discourse on Municipalised Democracy and Translocal Citizenship". Lex localis - Journal of Local Self-Government 9, n.º 2 (18 de abril de 2011): 163–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.4335/9.2.163-178(2011).

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This paper discusses a genuinely new political alternative. It is about the alter-globalization movement (AGM) founded on municipalized -yet global- democracy, horizontalism, and decentralization. The paper starts from the assumption that for a long time, the most important political innovations have not come from the traditional centres of political power, but they have instead been invented by the “newest social movements”. It tackles some of the topical debates on global, world and cosmopolitan citizenship in the light of a conceptualization of translocal citizenship that, in the long run, may prove to be the single most subversive thing the AGM has ever recuperated. Keywords: alter-globalisation movement • translocal citizenship • direct democracy • municipalisation
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Franch, Sara. "Global citizenship education discourses in a province in northern Italy". International Journal of Development Education and Global Learning 12, n.º 1 (30 de junho de 2020): 21–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.14324/ijdegl.12.1.03.

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While global citizenship education (GCE) is becoming increasingly popular, it is also a complex and ambiguous concept that assumes different meanings. This article explores the dominant discourses that construct GCE in terms of the qualification, socialization and subjectification functions of education. Based on a qualitative study that used constructivist and informed grounded theory, the article focuses on the emergence of GCE in the educational discourse of the Province of Trento in northern Italy. The article shows elements of convergence and divergence between the perspectives of policymakers and teachers, and illustrates how in the discourses the three purposes of GCE – qualification, socialization and subjectification – are deeply intertwined and overlapping.
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Erjavec, Karmen. "The “Bosnian war on terrorism”". Journal of Language and Politics 8, n.º 1 (1 de abril de 2009): 5–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/jlp.8.1.02erj.

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This paper explores the changes in the media discourse on granting and revoking Bosnian citizenship of foreigners in the most read Bosnian, Croatian, and Serbian quality daily newspapers from the end of the Bosnian war in 1995 until the Commission for the Revision of Decisions on Naturalization of Foreign Citizens finished its work in 2007. Critical discourse analysis of news articles shows that all newspapers recontextualised the discourse on granting and revoking citizenship from a nationalistic war discourse to a “war on terrorism” discourse, joining the anti-terrorism global discursive community. Serbian and Croatian newspapers have not only colonised the “war on terrorism” vocabulary and discourse of difference but they have also appropriated a specific local discourse to the more global “war on terrorism” discourse and have represented military actions against the Muslims in the Bosnian war “as our war on terrorism”. A Bosnian daily newspaper similarly represented the Commission’s activities as the “Bosnian war on terrorism”.
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Sigauke, Aaron T. "Citizenship and citizenship education: a critical discourse analysis of the Zimbabwe Presidential Commission Report". Education, Citizenship and Social Justice 6, n.º 1 (março de 2011): 69–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1746197910397913.

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CHRISTENSEN, KAREN, e DORIA PILLING. "User Participation Policies in Norway and England – the Case of Older People and Social Care". Journal of Social Policy 48, n.º 1 (10 de maio de 2018): 43–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0047279418000272.

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AbstractUser participation has become one of the most important concepts in the social care sector in many European countries, but the literature has mostly paid attention to disabled people or those with mental health problems. This article compares the user participation policies directed at social care for older people in Norway and England. Using a discourse analytical approach, a selection primarily of White papers from the 1960s until today are analysed. The analysis draws on the literature's discourse discussion, including a democratic/rights based discourse (full citizenship), a consumer discourse (consumers’ rights to choose welfare services), a co-production discourse (users and state/local authorities partnerships), and nuances of these discourses. The analysis shows that, while both countries start with variations of a democratic discourse, Norway develops a temporary and weak consumer discourse in a middle phase, then moves to co-production in current times. England, on the other hand, develops a comprehensive consumer discourse but also a surprisingly strong co-production discourse – the idea of a ‘Big Society’ – in early and current times.
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Andresen, Silje. "Being inclusive when talking about diversity". Nordic Journal of Comparative and International Education (NJCIE) 4, n.º 3-4 (29 de dezembro de 2020): 26–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.7577/njcie.3725.

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This paper explores how discourses of national identity are managed in one of Norway’s core institutions – the educational system. As Norway changed into a multi-ethnic society, classrooms became a central arena for individuals with different religious and ethnic backgrounds to meet. How boundaries of ‘Norwegianness’ are managed in the classroom is therefore of importance. Based on a thematic analysis of observations of classroom lessons and interviews with teachers in schools in Oslo, I argue that teachers navigate between several different yet overlapping discourses of 'being Norwegian'. Using the theoretical framework of bright and blurred boundaries and different understandings of ‘Norwegianness’, I show how teachers manage different discourses rooted in citizenship, cultural traditions, values, ethnic boundaries or Whiteness. These discourses can be activated simultaneously in society and in the classroom. However, the Norwegian school system’s core value of equality and inclusiveness gives precedence to the discourse based on citizenship. To manage the other discourses, teachers use different strategies when addressing boundaries along different dimensions of national belonging.
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김갑철. "Discourse of Global Citizenship and School Geography towards Justice". Journal of The Korean Association of Geographic and Environmental Education 24, n.º 2 (maio de 2016): 17–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.17279/jkagee.2016.24.2.17.

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Landrum, Dave. "Citizenship, education and the political discourse of New Labour". Contemporary Politics 8, n.º 3 (setembro de 2002): 219–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1356977022000025704.

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Wodak, Ruth. "Dis-Citizenship and Migration: A Critical Discourse-Analytical Perspective". Journal of Language, Identity & Education 12, n.º 3 (julho de 2013): 173–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15348458.2013.797258.

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Hirsto, Heidi, Saija Katila e Johanna Moisander. "(Re)constructing economic citizenship in a welfare state – intersections of gender and class". Equality, Diversity and Inclusion: An International Journal 33, n.º 2 (4 de fevereiro de 2014): 122–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/edi-04-2012-0036.

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Purpose – The purpose of the paper is to discuss and illustrate how contemporary market discourses rearticulate socio-political relationships and identities, including the rights, duties, and opportunities of individuals and categories of individuals as citizens. More specifically, the purpose is to analyze how “economic citizenship” is articulated and negotiated in the intersection of (Nordic) welfare state ideals and shareholder-oriented market discourses. The paper further elaborates on how different identity markers, especially gender and class, intersect in these articulations and contribute to exclusionary practices. Design/methodology/approach – The paper approaches the articulation of economic citizenship through an empirical study that focusses on business media representations and online discussions of a major factory shutdown in Finland. Drawing from discourse theory and the notions of representational intersectionality and translocational positionality, the paper analyzes how gender and class intersect in the construction of economic citizenship in the business media. Findings – The study illustrates how financialist market discourses render citizenship intelligible in exceedingly economic terms, overriding social and political dimensions of citizenship. The business media construct hierarchies of economic citizens where two categories of actors claim full economic citizenship: the transnational corporation and the transnational investor. Within these categories, particular systems of privilege intersect in similar ways, rendering them masculine and upper middleclass. Whether interpreted as hegemonic or counter-hegemonic, the financialist discourses rearticulate the social hierarchies and moral landscape in Finnish society. Originality/value – The paper contributes to critical/feminist management studies by elaborating on the role of the business media as an important site of political identity work, positioning, and moral regulation, where neoliberal ideas, based upon and reproducing masculine and elitist systems of privilege, appear as normalized and self-evidently valued.
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