Unsettled Citizens
Populism, global crisis, and modernity have rendered citizenship an ever-more fluid and troubled concept.
Even as millions of migrants from poorer countries struggle for citizenship in places like Canada, Europe, and the United States, wealthy families and individuals often have the means to purchase legal citizenship rights in a new country. Prominent court cases have granted the legal rights of citizens to corporations, which are themselves created by the government. Meanwhile, indigenous peoples frequently find their citizenship regulated by nation-states as well as tribal governments. In country after country, ethnic majorities are seeking laws to define citizenship based on race, language, and religion. In other settings, nations seek an ideal of citizenship that potentially erases biological, racial, and religious difference.
Our conference will explore all of these themes. In the first panel, we will debate the concept of economic citizenship, asking to what extent citizenship can be bought, constituted, or even lost by means of variation in wealth. In a second panel on citizenship and its gatekeepers, our discussion will explore how states, tribes, and other communities regulate belonging. And in the third panel, we will examine how migration and cross-border identity challenge the concept of citizenship.
For the past two years, the Radcliffe Institute has been pursuing a thematic focus on citizenship in the modern world, timed to coincide with the upcoming centennial of the 19th Amendment and the 150th anniversary of the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution. This conference will be the culmination of our two-year theme.
#UnsettledCitizens