Citizenship Studies. Special Double Issue
AutorIn
Julia Eckert and Lale Yalçın-Heckmann (Guest Editors)
Verlag
Abingdon: Routledge
Jahr der Veröffentlichung
2011
ISBN
1362-1025
OPAC
Abstract
CITIZENSHIP STUDIES
Volume 15 Numbers 3-4 June 2011
SPECIAL DOUBLE ISSUE
GUEST EDITORS: JULIA ECKERT AND LALE Y ALÇIN-HECKMANN
CONTENTS
Preface
Julia Eckert and Lale Yalçın-Heckmann 307
Part I: Subjects of Citizenship, Guest editor: Julia Eckert
Introduction: subjects of citizenship
Julia Eckert 309
State, citizenship, and the urban poor
Veena Das 319
Contesting privilege with right: the transformation of differentiated citizenship in Brazil
James Holston 335
Citizenship gone wrong
Florian Mühlfried 353
Multiple imaginations of the state: understanding a mobile conflict about justice and accountability from the perspective of Assyrian-Syriac communities
Zerrin Özlem Biner 367
On the durability and the decomposition of citizenship: the social logics of forced return migration in Cape Verde
Heike Drotbohm 381
On the creation of indigenous subjects in the Russian Federation
Brian Donahoe 397
The rule of law and citizenship in central India: post-colonial dilemmas
Nandini Sundar 419
Part II: Claiming Social Citizenship, Guest editor: Lale Yalçın-Heckmann
Introduction: claiming social citizenship
Lale Yalçın-Heckmann 433
Migration, citizenship, and the problem of moral hazard
Nora Dudwick 441
Labor migration, ethnic kinship, and the conundrum of citizenship in Turkey
Ayşe Parla 457
Is the state social or the computer inhuman? Claims for state support and citizenship in post-socialist Georgia
Teona Mataradze 471
Social citizenship and ethnicity around a public sector steel plant in Orissa, India
Christian Strümpell 485
On the promise and perils of citizenship: heuristic concepts, Zimbabwean example
Blair Rutherford 499
'The sleep has been rubbed from their eyes': social citizenship and the reproduction of local hierarchies in rural Hungary and Romania
Tatjana Thelen, Stefan Dorondel, Alexandra Szöke and Larissa Vetters 513
Contesting belonging and social citizenship: the case of refugee housing in Armenia
Milena Baghdasaryan 529