The Ethics of Multiple Citizenship

· Cambridge University Press
Ebook
418
Pages
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About this ebook

Citizenship is no longer an exclusive relationship. Many people today are citizens of multiple countries, whether by birth, naturalization, or even through monetary means, with schemes fast-tracking citizenship applications from foreigners making large investments in the state. Moral problems surround each of those ways of acquiring a second citizenship, while retaining one's original citizenship. Multiple citizenship can also have morally problematic consequences for the coherence of collective decisions, for the constitution of the demos, and for global inequality. The phenomenon of multiple citizenship and its ramifications remains understudied, despite its magnitude and political importance. In this innovative book, Ana Tanasoca explores these issues and shows how they could be avoided by unbundling the rights that currently come with citizenship and allocating them separately. It will appeal to scholars and students of normative political theory, citizenship, global justice, and migration in political science, law, and sociology.

About the author

Ana Tanasoca is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Centre for Deliberative Democracy and Global Governance, University of Canberra. Broadly interested in analytic normative political theory, her principal current research project explores the moral and epistemic dimensions of deliberation. Her work has been published in the European Journal of Sociology, Australasian Journal of Philosophy and Moral Philosophy and Politics.

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