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Citizenship and Nationhood in France and Germany: ,

by ,

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The state, wrote Aristotle, is a compound made up of citizens; and this compels us to consider who should properly be called a citizen and what a citizen really is. These are the questions, with their broad implications for the modern nation-state, that Rogers Brubaker addresses here. In a time when the flow of information, capital, and immigration has blurred the definition of the state, Brubaker's analysis of the origins and vicissitudes of citizenship in France and Germany reveals much about civic boundaries in the ...

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Citizenship and Nationhood in France and Germany: , 1992, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA

ISBN-13: 9780674131774

Hardcover