Theodora Kostakopoulou
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In search of a theory of European citizenship
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This chapter examines the extent to which different analytical frameworks of citizenship can help overcome the limitations of the European Union's policy on European citizenship and identity. Deontological liberalism is preoccupied with furnishing a legal framework within which individuals as sovereign and morally autonomous beings are able to pursue their chosen form of life. A political alternative to both liberal pluralism and the politics of the common good has been suggested by feminism, poststructuralism, postcolonial criticism and anti-subordination literature. For although citizenship is supposed to be gender-agnostic, in reality, it is underpinned by gender considerations. EU citizenship is no exception: despite its universalist pretensions, it is shaped by gender differentials. Transnational citizenship enriches the liberal democratic model of national citizenship by accommodating dual citizenship and genuine denizenship, by respecting the right to family unity and by affirming humanitarian obligations to refugees.

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