Migrations and Mobilities :Citizenship, Borders, and Gender

Publication subTitle :Citizenship, Borders, and Gender

Author: Benhabib Seyla  

Publisher: NYU Press‎

Publication year: 2009

E-ISBN: 9781479853298

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780814775998

Subject: D082 Democracy, human rights, civil rights

Keyword: 社会学,政治理论,法学各部门

Language: ENG

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Bibliography: http://www.nyupress.org/webchapters/9780814775998_benhabib_biblio.pdfIn an increasingly globalized world, the movement of peoples across national borders is posing unprecedented challenges, for the people involved as well as for the places to which they travel and their countries of origin. Citizenship is now a topic in focus around the world but much of that discussion takes place without sufficient attention to the women, men, and children, in and out of families, whose statuses and treatments depend upon how countries view their arrival. As essays in this volume detail, both the practices and theories of citizenship need to be reappraised in light of the array of persons and of twentieth-century commitments to their dignity and equality.Migrations and Mobilities uniquely situates gender in the context of ongoing, urgent conversations about globalization, citizenship, and the meaning of borders. Following an introductory essay by editors Seyla Benhabib and Judith Resnik that addresses the parameters and implications of gendered migration, the interdisciplinary contributors consider a wide range of issues, from workers' rights to children's rights, from theories of the nation-state and federalism to obligations under transnational human rights conventions. Together, the essays in this path-breaking collection force us to consider the pivotal role that gender should play in reconceiving the nature of citizenship in the contemporary, transnational world.Contribu

Chapter

I: SITUATED HISTORIES OF CITIZENSHIP AND GENDER

1 Citizenship and Gender in the Ancient World: The Experience of Athens and Rome

2 The Stateless as the Citizen’s Other: A View from the United States

II: GLOBAL MARKETS, WOMEN'S WORK

3 Citizenship, Noncitizenship, and the Transnationalization of Domestic Work

4 A Bio-Cartography: Maids, Neoslavery, and NGOs

III: CITIZENSHIP OF THE FAMILY, CITIZENSHIP IN THE FAMILY: WOMEN, CHILDREN, AND THE NATION-STATE

5 The “Mere Fortuity of Birth”? Children, Mothers, Borders, and the Meaning of Citizenship

6 Transnational Mothering, National Immigration Policy, and European Law: The Experience of the Netherlands

IV: ENGENDERED CITIZENSHIP IN PRACTICE

7 Global Feminism, Citizenship, and the State: Negotiating Women’s Rights in the Middle East and North Africa

8 Particularized Citizenship: Encultured Women and the Public Sphere

9 Multiculturalism, Gender, and Rights

V: RECONFIGURING THE NATION-STATE: WOMEN'S CITIZENSHIP IN THE TRANSNATIONAL CONTEXT

10 Globalizing Fragmentation: New Pressures on Women Caught in the Immigration Law–Citizenship Law Dichotomy

11 Status Quo or Sixth Ground? Adjudicating Gender Asylum Claims

12 Intercultural Political Identity: Are We There Yet?

13 Mobility, Migrants, and Solidarity: Towards an Emerging European Citizenship Regime

14 Citizenships, Federalisms, and Gender

About the Contributors

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