Democracy and its others
Material type:
- 9781501312007
- 321.8 E7D3
Item type | Current library | Item location | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Vikram Sarabhai Library | Rack 12-B / Slot 494 (0 Floor, West Wing) | Non-fiction | General Stacks | 321.8 E7D3 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 192321 |
Table of Contents:
Chapter 1: Ethnos, Demos, and Foreignness
Chapter 2: Hospitality or War? A Foreigner Approaches
Chapter 3: The Fearful Origins of Sovereignty in the Social Contract Tradition
Chapter 4: The Qualities of Sovereignty in the Social Contract Tradition
Chapter 5: Foreignness, Sovereignty, and the Social Contract Tradition
Chapter 6: The Naturalization of Artificial Sovereignty and Foreignness
Chapter 7: The Foreign-Sovereign
Chapter 8: Foreign Unto It-self, The Democratic Nation-State
Chapter 9: The Foreign-Citizen at the Threshold of Democratic Cosmopolitanism
Today's unprecedented levels of human migration present urgent challenges to traditional conceptualizations of national identity, nation-state sovereignty, and democratic citizenship. Foreigners are commonly viewed as outsiders whose inclusion within or exclusion from “the people” of the democratic state rests upon whether they benefit or threaten the unity of the nation. Against this instrumentalization of the foreigner, this book traces the historical development of the concepts of sovereignty and foreignness through the thought of philosophers such as Plato, Locke, Hobbes, Rousseau, Derrida, and Benhabib in order to show that foreignness is a structural feature of sovereignty that cannot be purged or assimilated. Understood in this light, foreignness allows for new forms of democratic political unity to be imagined that reject local practices which deprive individuals of political membership solely on the basis of national citizenship. This cosmopolitan model for citizenship provides a novel conceptual framework that simultaneously upholds the legal importance of democratic citizenship for political justice while ceaselessly contesting the exclusionary logic of the nation-state that reserves democratic rights for members of the nation alone.
(http://www.bloomsbury.com/us/democracy-and-its-others-9781501312007/)
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