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EuropeanaInformation 
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      <record key="001" att1="001" value="LIB910051000" att2="LIB910051000">001   LIB910051000</record>
      <field key="037" subkey="x">deutsch</field>
      <field key="050" subkey="x">Forschungsbericht</field>
      <field key="076" subkey="">Politikwissenschaft</field>
      <field key="079" subkey="y">http://www.ihs.ac.at/publications/pol/pw_42.pdf</field>
      <field key="079" subkey="z">Benhabib, Seyla, Wer sind wir? (pdf)</field>
      <field key="100" subkey="">Benhabib, Seyla</field>
      <field key="103" subkey="">Centre for European Studies, Harvard University</field>
      <field key="331" subkey="">Wer sind wir?</field>
      <field key="335" subkey="">Probleme politischer Identitäten im ausgehenden 20. Jahrhundert</field>
      <field key="403" subkey="">1. Aufl.</field>
      <field key="410" subkey="">Wien</field>
      <field key="412" subkey="">Institut für Höhere Studien</field>
      <field key="425" subkey="">1997, April</field>
      <field key="433" subkey="">13 S.</field>
      <field key="451" subkey="">Institut für Höhere Studien; Reihe Politikwissenschaft; 42</field>
      <field key="461" subkey="">Political Science Series</field>
      <field key="544" subkey="">IHSPW 42</field>
      <field key="753" subkey="">Abstract: The process of European unification, which some call a "myth", yet others an "illusion", gives rise to important</field>
      <field key="que" subkey="s">tions about national membership and citizenship rights. This article examines recent developments in Europe from the</field>
      <field key="bac" subkey="k">ground of the history of political thought about citizenship. Citizenship involves three salient aspects: collective identity</field>
      <field key=", p" subkey="r">ivileges of political membership, and a bundle of rights and entitlements which accrue to the citizen. T.H. Marshall has</field>
      <field key="ana" subkey="l">yzed this last aspect of citizenship through his famous categorization of civil, political, and social rights. What we are</field>
      <field key="obs" subkey="e">rving in contemporary Europe is a "dissociation" or "disaggregation" of these various aspects of citizenship. Migrant workers</field>
      <field key="and" subkey="">third country nationals often enjoy civic and social rights, while their political rights are limited. The article challenges</field>
      <field key="the" subkey="">"coupling" of nationality and the privileges of political citizenship. I argue that "jus sanguinis"' and "jus soli" are not</field>
      <field key="alo" subkey="n">e justifiable, from a normative viewpoint, to confer citizenship rights and that consent is the only principle which is</field>
      <field key="who" subkey="l">ly consistent with the self-understanding of liberal democracies in the granting of citizenship rights. I plead for a</field>
      <field key="dec" subkey="e">ntered model of the polity, in which membership and participation in the institutions of civil society are steps toward the</field>
      <field key="acq" subkey="u">isition of the status of citizen.;</field>
    </SEQUENTIAL>
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