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Citizenship and Its Exclusions: A Classical, Constitutional, and Critical Race Critique (Critical America #55)

Citizenship and Its Exclusions: A Classical, Constitutional, and Critical Race Critique (Critical America #55)

Current price: $50.00
Publication Date: May 31st, 2010
Publisher:
New York University Press
ISBN:
9780814776070
Pages:
236

Description

Citizenship is generally viewed as the most desired legal status an individual can attain, invoking the belief that citizens hold full inclusion in a society, and can exercise and be protected by the Constitution. Yet this membership has historically been exclusive and illusive for many, and in Citizenship and Its Exclusions, Ediberto Rom n offers a sweeping, interdisciplinary analysis of citizenship's contradictions.
Rom n offers an exploration of citizenship that spans from antiquity to the present, and crosses disciplines from history to political philosophy to law, including constitutional and critical race theories. Beginning with Greek and Roman writings on citizenship, he moves on to late-medieval and Renaissance Europe, then early Modern Western law, and culminates his analysis with an explanation of how past precedents have influenced U.S. law and policy regulating the citizenship status of indigenous and territorial island people, as well as how different levels of membership have created a de facto subordinate citizenship status for many members of American society, often lumped together as the "underclass."

About the Author

Ediberto Roman is Professor of Law at Florida International University. He is the author of The Other American Colonies: An International and Constitutional Law Examination of the United States' Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Island Conquests, and edits the NYU Press series Citizenship and Migration in the Americas.