comparative citizenship week 21 comparative sociology
TRANSCRIPT
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Comparative citizenship
Week 21
Comparative Sociology
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Recap
• Considered how health and welfare policies are related to capitalism and culture
• But are often gendered in their design
• Looked at notions of a ‘clash in cultures’
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Outline
• What is citizenship?
• Immigration and citizenship. – France, Germany, Australia and the UK
• The issue of asylum
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What is citizenship?
• Status within a nation-state
• Set of rights and responsibilities
• A social contract
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Marshall’s three aspects
• T.H.Marshall divided citizenship into three aspects– Civil
• Freedom of speech, right to justice
– Political• Right to participate in political decision-making
– Social• Sufficient economic welfare and security to be
able to participate in the live of the nation
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Citizenship ‘rights’
• Citizenship often involves organisation and distribution of resources
• Gender, class, ethnic inequalities can led to exclusion from these resources and therefore impact on the ‘level’ of citizenship
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Three key questions
• Who can be a citizen?
• What rights and responsibilities are bound up with citizenship?
• How ‘deep’ should citizenship be?– Should it take priority over other forms of
identity?
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Getting to be a citizen
• Gaining citizenship– By birth in a particular place
– By descent (parents and/or grandparents)
– By naturalization
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What does citizenship mean to you?
• Do you think of yourselves as citizens?
• What form does this citizenship take?
• How important is it to you?
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French citizenship
• In France, ideas about citizenship arose following the revolution.
• Citizenship is a political and territorial identification
• Citizenship is open to residents who identify and participate in the national culture
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Headscarves
• The issue of Muslim girls wearing headscarves in schools caused a political frenzy
• Opponents upheld ideal of ‘secular values’
• Immigration seen as a threat to national identity?
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Problematic citizenship
• Formal citizenship based oncivic participation
• Citizenship is thus seen as ‘at risk’ from immigrants
• For ‘immigrants’ to be French citizens, their identification with ‘white’ French ideas should take priority overtheir religious identity
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German citizenship
• German citizenship based on a community of descent
• Blood ties is the key element in defining the nation
• First naturalization laws
only in 2004
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Inclusion and exclusion
• Following collapse of the Soviet Block, Germany welcomed thousands of ethnic Germans ‘home’
• Many couldn’t speak German, and had few German cultural connections but they were granted citizenship
• 2 million Turkish ‘guestworkers’ in Germany who at that time did not have citizenship (including right to vote)
• Many 2nd or 3rd generation
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Problematic citizenship
• Ethnicity is the formal route to citizenship
• Guestworkers not able to participate as full citizens
• Centrality of German ethnicity allows denial of a multi-cultural society?
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Citizenship questions
• Discuss with the person sitting next to you how ideas about citizenship are invoked in the issue of headscarves in France and the exclusion of guestworkers in Germany.
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Australian citizenship
• Establishment of citizenship excluded the indigenous population
• Immigration Acts up to 1960s based on whiteness
• Immigration initially restricted to UK, then other white Europeans accepted
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Aboriginal identity
• White Australia policy lead to forced assimilation of Aborigines
• Aborigines Protection Act 1909 supported the forcible removal of Aboriginal children from their parents. This
continued until 1970s.
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UK citizenship
• After WW2, citizenship was extended to encourage commonwealth members to cure the labour shortage in Britain
• Immigration has become progressively tougher since then.
• Professional migration welcomed, unskilled workers excluded
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Rights and responsibilities
• Immigrants can be excluded from the social contract
• ‘No recourse to public funds’ clause means that families whose financial situation changed risk deportation
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Asylum Seekers in the UK
• Moral panic over asylum seekers
• ‘Bogus asylum seekers’ an oxymoron– Right to seek asylum enshrined in law
• Increasing numbers granted ‘leave to remain’ but denied full citizenship rights
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Asylum seekers as a ‘threat’
• Why do you think asylum seekers are vilified in the media? What links can you make to ideas about citizenship?
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Link to US citizenship film
• http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=925607787845599338&q=citizenship
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Summary
• Ideas about citizenship are linked to wider culture
• Rights and responsibilities are not neutral but linked to class, gender and ethnic inequalities
• Categories of inclusion and exclusion do change over time, but are always present