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This book explores the position of groups in society whose legal status or economic position makes them marginal citizenship, lacking the entitlement of full members of the polity. A team of distinguished contributors from the UK and North America, analyse the position of migrants, the disabled, prisoners, children, forced labourers and others, reflecting on the injustices they suffer and what this implies for our ideal of citizenship.
This book was published as a special issue of the
Critical Review of Social and Political Philosophy.
Table des matières
Preface 1. The margins of citizenship: introduction
Philip Cook and Jonathan Seglow 2. Citizenship and the marginalities of migrants
David Owen 3. Amnesty in immigration: forgetting, forgiving, freedom
Linda Bosniak 4. Workers without rights as citizens at the margins
Virginia Mantouvalou 5. Luck, opportunity and disability
Cynthia A. Stark 6. Citizenship and Disability: incommensurable lives and well-being
Steven R. Smith 7. Voters should not be in prison! The rights of prisoners in a democracy
Peter Ramsey 8. Against a minimum voting age
Philip Cook 9. Marginalization as non-contribution
Jonathan Seglow
A propos de l'auteur
Philip Cook, Lecturer in Political Theory, University of Edinburgh.
Jonathan Seglow, Senior Lecturer in Political Theory, Royal Holloway, University of London.